The US dollar weakened against the euro on Tuesday as the Chinese yuan showed more stability, after the currency pair neared but failed to break through technical levels supporting the single currency. The dollar has been boosted by trade tensions as the US economy is seen as better placed to handle protectionism than emerging markets, and as tariffs may narrow the US trade deficit.
After a 6.5 percent rally since mid-April, however, the dollar index has struggled to break much above the 95.5 level, which it has tested multiple times in the past two months. "It seems as if the DXY is having a lot of trouble to break through to new highs," said Mark McCormick, North American head of FX strategy at TD Securities in Toronto.
The dollar index was down 0.27 percent at 95.105. It had risen to 95.652 on July 19, its highest since July 2017. The euro gained 0.38 percent against the greenback to $1.1597. The euro has technical support at around $1.15.
A stabilizing Chinese yuan after China's central bank on Friday raised the cost of shorting the currency, is seen as boosting the euro against the dollar. "Dollar/CNH is driving everything in G10, especially the euro," said McCormick. The yuan has fallen to 6.8325 from a more than one-year high of 6.9122 on Friday. The Chinese currency has weakened by around 7 percent since mid-June.
The Aussie rallied more than half a percent to a one-week high at $0.7439 against the greenback after the central bank kept policy setting on hold and the Chinese stock market rallied strongly towards the close, boosting risk appetite.