The dollar rose on Friday to its highest level in five days as investors waited to see if US economic growth figures do anything to interrupt its months of strength. US President Donald Trump has expressed displeasure over the dollar's strength, ignoring a custom that US leaders avoid openly interfering in financial markets.
But the currency on Friday edged up towards a one-year peak scaled last week, gaining 0.2 against a basket of its peers to reach 94.910, a five-day high. The euro meanwhile remained stuck in the red in the wake of the European Central Bank on Thursday reiterating its plan to slowly end its accommodative monetary policy. That helped lift the dollar but the US currency also elicited support from the 10-year US Treasury note yield which extended its overnight rise and touched a six-week high of nearly three percent.
Traders are braced for a potentially strong reading of US gross domestic product (GDP) data, set for release later on Friday. The US economy is expected to have grown at a 4.1 percent annualised rate in the second quarter, following 2.0 percent in the first quarter. But analysts at ING said the dollar could fall after the release because the GDP figures had been inflated by tariff-related trade activity and high inventories instead of economic fundamentals. "If this high US GDP print is more luck than fundamental, then we won't be surprised to see a 'buy the rumour, sell the fact' type of reaction - with the dollar broadly weakening after the release," said the analysts in a note to clients.
At 1130 GMT the euro was down 0.2 percent at $1.1627. The single currency had sunk more than 0.7 percent on Thursday after the ECB said it would end its 2.6 trillion euro stimulus programme this year and keep rates at a record low level through the summer of 2019. That came after the euro rallied on relief about the United States and the European Union agreeing to begin talks to lower tariffs.
"There may yet be more political storms for Europe to cope with and the risk of a global trade war hasn't gone away," said Kit Juckes, a macro strategist at Societe Generale in London. "A stronger euro depends on the Fed sticking to its script and raising rates but not dramatically above its own estimate of neutral policy," he said. China's yuan was heading on Friday for its longest weekly losing streak since November 2015. The yuan has been under sustained pressure since US President Donald Trump threatened to impose tariffs on all imports from China.
The United States and China presented radically different visions of Beijing's economic model at the WTO on Thursday, with Washington's ambassador criticising "the world's most protectionist economy" and his Chinese counterpart describing a US report as "half-cooked". The yuan on Friday fell to a 13-month low, shedding half a percent to breach the key 6.8 per dollar level. Uncertainty before the Bank of Japan's two-day policy meeting beginning on Monday capped the dollar versus the yen.
The possibility that the BOJ may tweak its policy has dominated investors' attention following reports last week it was looking to make its massive stimulus programme more sustainable. The US currency was 0.1 percent lower at 111.135 yen, unable to hold gains after rising briefly to 111.25. The pound was down 0.1 percent at $1.3094. It had dropped 0.6 percent overnight as a stronger dollar and growing uncertainty over Brexit negotiations offset the positive impact of bets on a Bank of England interest rate rise next week.
Comments
Comments are closed.