Dollar edges lower ahead of inflation print, ECB meeting
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[June 09, 2021] By
Ritvik Carvalho
LONDON (Reuters) - The dollar hovered at
the lower end of recent gains on Wednesday as traders looked to upcoming
U.S. inflation data and a European Central Bank (ECB) meeting to gauge
the pace of global recovery and policymakers' thinking about paring back
stimulus.
Investors have piled up bets against the dollar, but are growing nervous
about whether the beginning of the end of enormous monetary stimulus is
nigh - and worry that interest rate rises could end a 15-month dollar
downtrend. [MKTS/GLOB]
Some think tapering could be hastened, and the dollar boosted, if U.S.
inflation runs hotter than the 0.4% monthly clip that economists expect.
For the ECB, the focus is on any signs of an imminent slowdown to its
bond buying programme.
Both are due on Thursday and the anticipation has all but killed
volatility in major currencies, as traders assume a wait-and-see stance.
The euro ticked higher to $1.2191 by midday trade in London, while the
dollar held firm at 109.47 yen.
Deutsche Bank's Currency Volatility Index hit its lowest level since
February 2020 on Tuesday, and sank further on Wednesday. The U.S. dollar
index was parked at 90.005.
(Graphic: Sleepy FX markets -
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/mkt/dgkplnjrkpb/Pasted%20image%201623224634708.png)
"We look for a fairly calm day in FX markets today, ahead of the May
U.S. CPI and the ECB meeting tomorrow," said ING strategists Petr Krpata,
Francesco Pesole and Chris Turner in a note to clients.
The Australian and New Zealand dollars were firmly entrenched in narrow
bands, with the Aussie at $0.7744, roughly the middle of the past two
months' range, and the kiwi travelling likewise at $0.7199. [AUD/]
Sterling edged slightly higher, but remained stuck within recent ranges
as doubt has crept in over whether rising cases of the coronavirus'
Delta variant in Britain could delay business reopening plans scheduled
for June 21. It last bought $1.4168. [GBP/]
BOC, ECB, CPI
Leading in to the U.S. inflation figures, Chinese producer price data
for May showed the biggest jump in a dozen years - signalling that
factories are not absorbing higher raw material costs and price pressure
is flowing down supply chains.
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A U.S. Dollar banknote is seen in this illustration taken May 26,
2020. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration
Canadian dollar traders were also on edge ahead of a central bank meeting on
Wednesday. The bank is expected to leave rates on hold but flag further tapering
of asset purchases, with any surprises on the size or speed liable to boost the
loonie.
However, the week's major focus is on inflation, and the ECB and traders see
both events bringing risks on all sides.
"U.S. economists are expecting a 0.4% month-on-month rise in both the headline
and the core inflation numbers - they're big numbers," said Commonwealth Bank of
Australia currency strategist Joe Capurso.
"I think the risk is they fall short of that," he said. That could pull down
U.S. yields and bring the dollar with them, Capurso added, unless the figure
spooked stock markets enough to drive safe-haven flows into the dollar.
The ECB is expected to keep policy settings steady, but the euro is likely to be
sensitive to changes in the bank's economic forecasts or any signal that the
pace of bond buying could be reduced in months ahead.
"Market movements over the last few months – rising long-term rates, widening
spreads and the rise of the euro (up 4% against the U.S. dollar since March) –
indicate a tightening of financial conditions in the euro zone," said Franck
Dixmier, Global CIO Fixed Income at Allianz Global Investors.
"The ECB cannot ignore this. This tightening – as recently indicated by central
bank officials – reflects an improving economy in the euro zone, driven both by
accelerating demand from abroad and, domestically, by accelerating vaccine
rollout."
Elsewhere, China's yuan was steady around the 6.4 per dollar level on Wednesday,
as a bill aimed at competing with China cleared the U.S. Senate, damping yuan
bulls' recent enthusiasm.
Bitcoin recovered from a three-week low it hit on Tuesday when signs of
institutional investor caution and regulatory attention drove selling. It last
bought $34,495.
(Reporting by Ritvik Carvalho; Additional reporting by Tom Westbrook in
Singapore; Editing by Edmund Blair)
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