The dollar hovered near an 11-week low against its peers on Wednesday, weighed by expectations the US Federal Reserve could cut interest rates some time in the next few months. The dollar index versus a basket of six major currencies was effectively flat at 96.707, trading just above the 96.459 level it hit on Monday, its lowest since late March.
The index has been under pressure following a sharp decline in long-term US Treasury yields, which fell to near two-year lows on Friday after a soft US jobs report raised expectations for an interest rate cut by the Fed. Investor focus is now on the Fed's next policy meeting on June 18-19 and what kind of signals the central bank could offer on the direction of monetary policy.
"The market has priced in a rate cut by the Fed to a significant degree," said Shinichiro Kadota, senior strategist at Barclays in Tokyo.
"So the market is waiting for next week's Fed meeting as a chance to see by how much and for how long it is ready to ease policy." Expectations for a central bank rate cut this year rose last week after a number of Fed officials, including Chairman Jerome Powell, hinted they were open to easing monetary policy.
According to the CME Group's FedWatch Tool, interest rate futures traders are pricing in a 17% chance of easing at the Fed's meeting next week and an 80% chance at the following meeting in July.
The euro was steady at $1.1330 and in close reach of a three-month peak of $1.1348 scaled on Friday. The single currency was little affected by US President Donald Trump's accusation that Europe was devaluing the euro, which has gained roughly 1.4% against the dollar so far in June.
The dollar was little changed at 108.480 yen. The greenback has crawled off a five-month low of 107.810 plumbed a week ago when risk aversion in the broader markets heightened demand for the safe-haven yen. China's yuan was steady in offshore trade at 6.9250 per dollar after bouncing back the previous day from seven-month lows.
The yuan had risen on Tuesday after China's central bank said it would sell yuan-denominated bills in Hong Kong in late June, in a move that some market analysts believed was aimed at stemming a sharp decline in the yuan.
An escalation in the US-China trade conflict has weighed heavily on the yuan this year.
Trump tweeted on Tuesday that the euro and other currencies are devalued against the dollar and put the United States at a big disadvantage.
"For the first time in a while the US president decided to criticise the currency policies of other countries," said Makoto Noji, chief currency and foreign bond strategist at SMBC Nikko Securities.
"But his criticism lacked the strength of his earlier statements on currencies. When he took office, Trump had stressed that a weaker dollar was necessary to create US employment."