Dollar inches down, sterling steady ahead of Bank of England meeting
						
		 
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		 [June 24, 2021]  By 
		Elizabeth Howcroft 
		 
		LONDON (Reuters) -The dollar slipped on 
		Thursday, having spent the week gradually edging away from two-month 
		highs hit after the U.S. Federal Reserve's surprise hawkish shift at its 
		meeting last week. 
		 
		Currency markets were quiet as traders weighed up different signals from 
		Federal Reserve officials on the timing of a withdrawal of monetary 
		stimulus. 
		 
		The dollar index was down 0.1% at 1023 GMT, having pared back some gains 
		after hitting a two-month high of 92.408 on Friday. 
		 
		The euro was a touch higher against the dollar, up 0.2% on the day at 
		$1.19465. 
		 
		German business morale rose by more than expected in June and hit its 
		highest level since November 2018, an Ifo survey showed. 
		 
		The dollar got some support overnight from two Fed officials saying that 
		a period of higher inflation in the United States could last longer than 
		expected. 
						
		
		  
						
		 
		 
		But on Tuesday, Fed Chair Jerome Powell had said that price pressures 
		should ease on their own. 
		 
		Six Fed officials are due to speak on Thursday, including New York Fed 
		President John Williams, who on Tuesday said any conversation about when 
		to adjust interest rates is still far off. 
		 
		"It appears that the market pricing of (the) Fed’s rate expectations are 
		already sitting on the hawkish side so that additional comments 
		indicating early tapering/hikes now have a more contained and above all 
		short-lived impact on sensitive assets," wrote ING FX strategists in a 
		note to clients. 
		 
		"We continue to expect the market to reward those currencies that are 
		backed by tightening cycles (NOK, CAD and NZD are notable examples in 
		G10 space), although the room for a rally in low yielders has probably 
		shrunk." 
						
		
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			An employee counts U.S. dollar bills at a money exchange in central 
			Cairo, Egypt, March 20, 2019. REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany/File 
			Photo 
            
			  
Market attention is focused on the Bank of England meeting and policy 
announcement at 1100 GMT. No policy changes are expected but investors will be 
looking for any hints that the BoE will follow in the Fed’s footsteps as 
inflation pressures mount. 
 
Andy Haldane is likely to vote again to scale back the bond-buying programme at 
his final meeting before leaving the BoE and market players will be keen to see 
if any other policymakers join him in doing so. 
Sterling was steady at $1.3968 and 85.505 pence per euro. 
 
"I am not sure whether the BoE will send the signal the Sterling bulls are 
hoping for," wrote Commerzbank strategist Thu Lan Nguyen in a note to clients. 
 
"I fear that it might be too early and that the recent rise in inflation wasn’t 
high enough yet. As a result, I see considerable potential for disappointment 
for Sterling today." 
The Australian dollar, which is seen as a liquid proxy for currency market risk 
appetite, was flat on the day at $0.7578, having gained 1.4% so far this week. 
 
The U.S. dollar was down 0.1% against the yen, after the pair hit a 15-month 
high of 111.11 overnight. 
 
Elsewhere, bitcoin was down around 1%, at $33,300, having recovered somewhat 
from when it dropped to $28,600 on Tuesday. Ether was trading around $1,900. 
 
U.S. jobs data is due later in the session. 
 
(Reporting by Elizabeth Howcroft; Editing by Ana Nicolaci da Costa and Angus 
MacSwan) 
				 
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