The dollar fell to a near two-week low on Thursday against a basket of currencies as traders pared greenback holdings on lower US Treasury yields and further losses on Wall Street. A weaker-than-forecast rise in US consumer prices in September also reduced bets for a faster pace of interest rate increases by the Federal Reserve, further eroding the dollar's appeal.
The euro climbed to a one-week peak against the dollar as minutes of the European Central Bank's policy meeting last month suggested policy-makers have not abandoned their plan to end the ECB's 2.6 trillion-euro bond-purchase program this year.
The Swedish crown jumped following stronger-than-expected inflation and home price data, raising prospects for the Riksbank to increase interest rates in December, analysts said. The Chinese yuan rose in offshore trading, rebounding from early weakness due to a global equity rout. Traders brushed off comments from US President Donald Trump signaling he is not backing off on escalating his trade war with Beijing.
"Yields have pulled back and you have softer inflation data. This puts a question on the number of Fed rate hikes in 2019," said Minh Trang, senior FX trader at Silicon Valley Bank in Santa Clara, California. An index that tracks the dollar versus six currencies fell to 94.987, the lowest since September 28. At 10:50 a.m. (1450 GMT), the dollar index was down 0.28 percent at 95.242.
The euro zone common currency was up 0.41 percent at $1.15655 after touching a one-week high. It was 0.42 percent higher at 129.840 yen. The Swedish crown was 1.35 percent higher at 9.0075 per dollar and 0.92 percent stronger at 10.4279 per euro. Offshore yuan rose 0.42 percent to 6.8944 per dollar, rebounding from an eight-week low set earlier on Thursday.
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