US DOLLAR

Dollar Edges Higher, But Set For Sharp Weekly Loss As Inflationary Pressures Ease

The U.S. dollar edged higher in early European trade Friday, but was heading for a sharp weekly loss after cooling inflation spurred growing bets that the Federal Reserve has completed its series of rate hikes.

At 03:00 ET (08:00 GMT), the Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six other currencies, rose 0.1% to 104.374, still on course for a weekly loss of around 1.3%.

The dollar has weakened this week growing expectations that inflation is in retreat and interest rate increases by the Federal Reserve are a thing of the past.

Tuesday's drop in U.S. consumer prices started the ball rolling, but oil slipping to four-month lows and news from Walmart on Thursday that it will cut prices to help struggling consumers in the holiday quarter have added to the disinflationary pressures.

There are a number of Fed speakers scheduled to speak later in the session, and traders will look for how hawkish they appear to be given the change in market tone.

In Europe, GBP/USD fell 0.2% to 1.2377, weakening after data showed U.K. retail sales slumped 0.3% on the month in October, an annual fall of 2.7%, as British shoppers continued to struggle from the combination of higher interest rates and still elevated inflation.

U.K. CPI plunged to 4.6% on an annual basis in October, from 6.7% in September, data showed earlier this week.

This was the largest fall  in the annual CPI rate from one month to the next since April 1992, but it still remains among the highest in the developed world, and the Bank of England has sought to stress that it is nowhere near cutting interest rates from their 15-year peak, even as the economy flat-lines close to a recession.

EUR/USD fell 0.1% to 1.0839, but is set to gain around 1.5% this week, its largest weekly increase since mid-July.

ECB President Christine Lagarde is set to speak at the European Banking Congress in Frankfurt later in the session, and her comments will be parsed carefully for clues of the intentions of policy makers regarding interest rates after the central bank paused its cycle of hikes last month.

In Asia, USD/JPY traded 0.2% lower at 150.44, with the yen among the biggest beneficiaries of recent dollar weakness, as this pair is on track to drop 0.7% this week - its best weekly gain in over four months.

Source : Investing.com

 

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