U.S. President Donald Trump adopted a more restrained tone than
in the first debate, though exchanges again focused on the
handling of the COVID-19 pandemic and personal slights.
The dollar was 0.2% lower against a basket of currencies <=USD>
in midday trades in Europe, just clear of a seven-week low hit
on Wednesday. It was down just shy of 1% for the week.
A Biden victory, which polls predict, will probably drive
further dollar weakness, because he is expected to spend more on
coronavirus aid than Trump.
However, betting markets showed a small movement in Trump's
favour in the immediate aftermath of the debate, bookmaker
Ladbrokes said on Twitter on Friday - which helped the dollar to
strengthen.
Euro zone bond yields inched lower as business surveys in France
and Germany showed the impact of the second wave of COVID-19
infections in the bloc's two biggest economies.
Despite the data, the euro <EUR=> ticked up 0.2% against the
dollar to $1.1844.
"The PMIs weren't good, but they weren't as bad as expected, and
that's the important point", said Marshall Gittler, head of
investment research at BDSwiss Group.
"Furthermore, stock prices are being boosted by some good
earnings reports from Daimler, Barclays and others, and that's
encouraging a "risk-on" mood in FX too", he added.
Adding to the optimistic mood, chief negotiators for Britain and
the European Union reported some progress had been made in
Brexit trade talks.
Sterling was just slightly down against the dollar at $1.3070.
The safe-haven yen <JPY=> rose about 0.1% to 104.71 per dollar,
paring some losses made on Thursday after U.S. House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi said stimulus talks had made progress.
Hopes that Congress might pass a stimulus package before the
election and confidence that spending would follow, no matter
who gets elected, has driven a sell-off in the bond market in
anticipation of inflation and government borrowing. [US/]
The Chinese yuan <CNY=> ticked up 0.2% against the dollar after
an official at China's foreign exchange regulator said it has
been more stable than expected, suggesting authorities are not
too worried about its recent rise.
The yuan has gained about 7.5% since the end of May as China led
the global coronavirus recovery. [CNY/]
(Reporting by Julien Ponthus, editing by Larry King)
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