The dollar index rose 0.3% to 92.880 in early
European trading hours, its highest level since Aug. 27. It was
last up 0.2%.
A flurry of U.S. economic data is due out this week, starting
with U.S. consumer price data on Tuesday, which will give a
broad picture of the economy's progress ahead of the Federal
Reserve's meeting next week.
The Philadelphia Fed President Patrick Harker became the latest
official to say he wants the central bank to start tapering this
year, saying in a Nikkei interview that he was keen to scale
back asset purchases.
"The U.S. dollar's recent rebound has coincided with more
hawkish comments from Fed Presidents," FX analysts at MUFG said
in a note.
The Wall Street Journal reported on Friday that Fed officials
will seek to make an agreement to begin paring bond purchases in
November.
Retail sales and productions figures also slated for later this
week.
The euro was among the currencies to lose ground to the dollar,
dipping 0.3% to $1.17750, its lowest level in a little over two
weeks, after the European Central Bank said last week it would
start to trim its own emergency bond purchases.
The yen also fell back around 0.2% and was last at 110.100.
"A couple of dynamics favour the dollar," said Rodrigo Catril,
senior currency strategist at National Australia Bank in Sydney.
"Re-opening still faces challenges from the consumer, who is
cautious and from bottlenecks which restrict ability for the
economy to rebound with some gusto.
"At the same time rising infections suggest we may still need to
reintroduce restrictions of some sort. The other thing is that
the Fed continues to signal that tapering is coming."
(Reporting by Iain Withers, Additional reporting by Saikat
Chatterjee in London and Tom Westbrook in Singapore, Editing by
Angus MacSwan)
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