The US dollar index, the Japanese yen and the Swiss franc rose on Monday morning, while the offshore yuan tumbled to a 2020 low as growing fears about the spread of a coronavirus from China pushed investors into safer assets.
Health authorities around the world are working to prevent a pandemic. The virus has killed 81 people in China, and nearly 2,800 people have been infected globally. Chinese Premier Li Keqiang will "inspect and direct" efforts to control an outbreak in the central city of Wuhan and promised reinforcements, as people accused provincial authorities of being too slow to respond.
While safe-haven assets have strengthened, currency moves were limited. The yen was the main beneficiary, up 0.3% to 108.94, although it remained well below the peak hit on Jan. 8. The dollar index was up 0.07%, last at 97.925. The Swiss franc was up 0.19% to 0.969 per dollar.
"The dollar usually does strengthen as a result of anything that seems like it has the potential for physical chaos," Juan Perez, senior foreign exchange trader and strategist, Tempus, Inc.
The possibility of a rapid turnaround in the event the virus is contained explains the relatively muted move in the dollar, Perez said.
The offshore yuan shed as much as 0.9% to 6.99 per dollar, its weakest since Dec. 30.
The yuan has gone into a tailspin since it rallied to a 5-1/2-month high earlier in January. The dollar has gained more than 2% versus the Chinese currency since last Monday.
The Australian dollar, which is exposed to the Chinese economy, dropped 0.88% to $0.677, its lowest since Dec. 2.
The euro fell to a two-month low against the yen of 119.90 yen and was last 0.3% lower on the day to 120.08. The euro was last 0.02% weaker at $1.102.
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