The
greenback's gains were more pronounced against its emerging
market rivals with the Mexican peso and the Taiwan dollar
leading losers. The former was hit by a bout of profit taking
after a rate hike overnight while weak memory chip demand
weighed on Taiwan's currency.
Data on Thursday showed U.S. producer prices posted their
largest annual increase in more than a decade in the 12 months
through July.
While the data comes a day after consumer price data indicated
inflation may be peaking, analysts said producer price data
helps the case for removing some of the Fed's stimulus.
Against a basket of its rivals, the greenback held firm around
the 93 level, near an April high of 93.195 hit last week. It is
up 0.2% this week after a 0.8% rise last week.
"With producer prices feeding into consumer prices, this
suggests that the CPIs may have not hit a ceiling yet, and may
have increased again bets on a potential tapering announcement
by the Fed in September," said Charalambos Pissouros, head of
research at JFD Group.
The Fed will announce a plan to taper its asset purchases in
September, according to a solid majority of economists polled by
Reuters.
Several Fed officials this week came out in support of tapering
bond buying in coming months, setting themselves apart from
other, more dovish major central banks such as the European
Central Bank and the Bank of Japan.
The dollar's strength was also encouraged by a mild bout of risk
aversion in currency markets, with the Australian dollar and the
Chinese yuan struggling against the greenback.
The Aussie stood at $0.7340, near an eight-month low of $0.72895
touched last month, while the Canadian dollar eased to C$1.2517.
The euro edged higher at $1.1750, on course for a second
straight week of losses and within striking distance of a
four-month low of $1.1706 hit on Wednesday.
Elsewhere, bitcoin climbed 4% to $46,194, nearing Wednesday's
three-month peak of $46,787 while Ethereum rose 6% higher to
$3,225.
(Reporting by Saikat Chatterjee; Additional reporting by
Hideyuki Sano in TOKYO; Editing by Mark Heinrich and Raissa
Kasolowsky)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|
|