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Hike bets hoist euro and bolster U.S. dollar

Reuters
KEY POINTS
  • The dollar was firm on Wednesday as stronger-than-expected U.S. economic data and hawkish Federal Reserve comments pointed to higher interest rates, while rate-hike bets in Europe also have the common currency clinging on above parity.
  • The euro rose 0.16% to $1.0003 in early Asia trade, which, if sustained, would make for a third session of gains in a row. Eurozone inflation data is due at 0900 GMT.

The dollar was firm on Wednesday as stronger-than-expected U.S. economic data and hawkish Federal Reserve comments pointed to higher interest rates, while rate-hike bets in Europe also have the common currency clinging on above parity.

German inflation running at its highest in nearly 50 years and a growing chorus of European Central Bank officials calling for big rate hikes has markets pricing a better-than-even chance of a 75 basis point rate hike next week.

The euro rose 0.16% to $1.0003 in early Asia trade, which, if sustained, would make for a third session of gains in a row. Eurozone inflation data is due at 0900 GMT.

The U.S. dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of currencies, hovered at 108.71, just below a two-decade peak of 109.48 made on Monday, with the dollar having gained on sterling, the Aussie and the kiwi overnight.

The sliding yen steadied at 138.56 per dollar.

Chinese activity surveys due at 0130 GMT will be closely watched in the Asia session and could weigh on the yuan and the region’s commodity currencies — such as the Australian dollar — if the data disappoints.

Another month of manufacturing contraction is expected for August, with a reading of 49.2 forecast, marginally higher than the 49.0 reading in July.

“I think that the recent data, particularly those industrial profits that came out over the weekend, are pointing to the risk that we might actually get a more severe downside surprise there,” said Rodrigo Catril, a currency strategist at National Australia Bank in Sydney.

The Australian and New Zealand dollars were nursing losses, but both steadied in early trade to put the Aussie at $0.6861 and the kiwi at $0.6139.

The yuan was under pressure at 6.9211 per dollar in offshore trade.

U.S. job openings increased 199,000 to 11.239 million in July, data released overnight showed, pointing to persistently strong demand for labor and possibly foreshadowing a strong showing for broader labor data due on Friday.

New York Fed chief John Williams told the Wall Street Journal that it will “take some time” before interest rates would be cut, while Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic said: “I don’t think we are done tightening.”

Traders price about a 69% chance of a 75 bp Fed funds rate hike next month.

Sterling gained 0.1% to $1.1666 in early trade, after hitting a fresh 2½-year low of $1.1622 overnight.

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