Dollar bulls still
nervous as March rate hike bakes in
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[March 02, 2017]
By Patrick Graham
LONDON
(Reuters) - Further signs that the U.S. Federal Reserve is swinging
toward a March rise in interest rates kept the dollar rising against the
yen and a handful of other major currencies on Thursday, although the
pace against a resilient euro was slower.
Governor Lael Brainard, a dove on the U.S. central bank's open market
committee, was the latest to say on Wednesday that an improving global
economy and a solid U.S. recovery mean it will be "appropriate soon" to
raise rates.
That fueled a rise of more than half a percent to a two-week high of
114.40 yen <JPY=> and gains of up to 1 percent against the Australian
and New Zealand dollars, typically sold when investors are reining in
their appetite for risk.
The latter moves, and the relatively minimal scale of the gains against
the euro <EUR=> and sterling <GBP=>, pointed to a more mixed picture,
however, even as expectations of a rise in rates this month double.
The euro has proven strong around $1.05 and the losses for both European
stock markets and the commodities currencies point to worries about the
impact of higher U.S. rates and a higher dollar on global growth.
"The fact that the dollar hasn't managed to rally to any order of
magnitude is of concern to dollar bulls," said Richard Benson, co-head
of portfolio management with currency fund Millennium Global in London.
"The problem from here is that if you haven't been involved for a period
of time, are you going to bet against the euro when it's almost
fully-priced for the Fed? The next two percent (move higher for the
dollar) may be very sticky."
The dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of six
major currencies, was just 0.25 percent higher on the day on Thursday at
102.03 <.DXY>.
Against the euro it gained just 0.3 percent to $1.0518, with traders
citing a steady drip of corporate demand for the single currency, which
also fueled a rise against sterling on Wednesday.
A widening of U.S.-Japan interest rate differentials helped the dollar,
but the U.S. two-year yield fell back a basis point from Asian session
highs of 1.308 percent as traders arrived at their desks in New York.
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U.S. one hundred dollar bills are seen in this picture illustration,
August 2, 2013. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji/Illustration/File Photo
Some analysts warned that the dollar could weaken, despite the widening
interest rate differentials, should stocks retreat.
"If the Fed goes ahead with a faster pace of rate hikes and shrinks its
balance sheet, it will weigh on stock prices," said Minori Uchida, chief
FX analyst at Bank of Tokyo Mitsubishi UFJ.
"Lower share prices and wider yield differentials would result in a
weaker dollar, just like in May 2013 when Fed's Bernanke signaled
tapering."
Speeches from Fed Chair Janet Yellen and Vice Chair Stanley Fischer on
Friday are now widely expected to be the final piece of the puzzle,
along with next week's non-farm payrolls.
But Millennium's Benson and a number of others point to the need for a
bigger move in yields of longer-dated U.S. Treasuries if the greenback
is to rise further.
"Whether the Fed's next hike is in March, May or June is less important
than whether they go twice or three times this year, and that in turn is
less important than what the market prices as a terminal Fed Funds
rate," said Societe Generale strategist Kit Juckes.
"At the moment, the market isn't convinced that Fed Funds will peak much
above 2 percent. A move higher from there would be more supportive for
the dollar than any rethink about how fast we get to 2 percent."
(Additional reporting by Yuzuha Oka in TOKYO; Editing by Andrew Roche)
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