After central banks sought to push back against rising rate hike
expectations last week, sending the euro and the pound tumbling,
currency markets have settled back into another spell of low
volatility.
The euro stood at $1.1581, unchanged on the day, and the dollar
index at 94.030 , also little moved.
Adam Cole, currency analyst at RBC Capital Markets, remains
constructive on the dollar. That is based on a "purely vanilla
nominal rates story" predicated on his prediction that the
divergence in rate expectations with the U.S. would soon shrink,
supporting the dollar.
"We will get better direction when we get to the U.S. CPI," he
said, referring to data due out on Wednesday.
The data is expected to show U.S. consumer prices galloped and
Chinese factory gate prices soared in October.
Ahead of the inflation data, a slew of central bankers is due to
speak later on Tuesday, including European Central Bank
President Christine Lagarde at 1300 GMT and Fed chair Jerome
Powell at 1400 GMT.
Standard Chartered strategists Steve Englander and John Davies
said in a research note this week that they were now expecting
one rate hike from the Fed in 2022, down from a previous
expectation of no hikes. But they are not changing their dollar
forecasts with current market pricing for future rate rises "too
aggressive".
Elsewhere, the yen rose to a one-month high of 112.73 versus the
dollar after hitting a four-year low last month. The yen was
last at 112.95 per dollar, leaving the greenback down 0.2% on
the day.
Sterling, hammered last week in the wake of the Bank of
England's surprise decision to keep rates on hold, edged up 0.1%
to $1.3577, having recovered from the $1.3425 low hit on Friday.
The New Zealand dollar dipped 0.1% to $0.7163 after jumping on
Monday. It has been drawing support from traders wary of the
possibility that the Reserve Bank of New Zealand could raise
rates by as much as 50 basis points (bps) later this month.
The risk-sensitive Australian dollar dropped 0.2% to trade at
$0.7407.
Bitcoin rose to a record $68,564, pulling ether with it to a
record $4,800 in Asian trading hours, before pulling back to
$67,615.
(Reporting by Tommy Wilkes,; Editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise
and Bernadette Baum)
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