NEW YORK: The dollar rose against a basket of currencies on Friday, paring some of the week's losses, as a stronger-than-expected rise in US and China's inflation gauges drove up bond yields.
The US Dollar Currency Index, which measures the greenback against a basket of six currencies, was 0.156% higher at 92.218.
"We're seeing a consolidation in the broad US dollar today after a week of losses as inflation data from China and the US sparks the US Treasury curve back into life," said Simon ine and a half years, fitting in with expectations for higher inflation as the economy re-opens amid an improved public health environment and massive government funding.
Inflation is expected to heat up this year, driven by pent-up demand and as the weak readings last spring drop out of the calculation. Prices tumbled early in the pandemic amid mandatory closures of non-essential businesses across many states to slow the first wave of COVID-19 infections.
Most economists and Federal Reserve officials believe higher inflation will be transitory because of labor market slack.
Earlier on Friday, data showed China's factory gate prices beat analyst expectations and rose at their fastest annual pace since July 2018 in March, the latest sign that a recovery in the world's second-largest economy is gathering momentum.
The dollar was also helped by data showing a second straight monthly drop in industrial production in Germany, further boosting the likelihood of Europe's biggest economy having contracted in the first quarter.
Still, the dollar's rally this year appears to have run out of steam. Despite Friday's gains, the dollar index was on pace to finish the week down 0.8%, its worst weekly showing this year.
"In short, the energy has gone out of the dollar's first-quarter rebound, just as it has gone out of the bond sell-off," said Kit Juckes, head of FX strategy at Societe Generale.
Sterling steadied on Friday, having touched a two-month low against the dollar in early London trading. It was still set for its biggest weekly drop against the euro so far this year, hurt by profit-taking after a strong first quarter.
The Australian dollar also fell as much as 0.9%, before paring its losses.
Analysts at MUFG said in a note the move had no clear macro trigger, but a financial stability report from Australia's central bank indicating it would refrain from monetary policy action to tackle growing lending risk may have pressured the currency.