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		Dollar hovers above one-week low as Evergrande questions linger
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		 [September 24, 2021]  LONDON 
		(Reuters) - The dollar hovered above a one-week low versus major peers 
		on Friday, taking a breather after its biggest drop in almost a month 
		overnight, as questions lingered about the fate of property developer 
		China Evergrande Group. 
 The yen fell to its weakest since mid-August as Treasury yields pushed 
		to the highest since the start of July.
 
 The dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of six 
		rivals, rose 0.08% to 93.175 after sliding 0.36% on Thursday and 
		touching the lowest since Sept. 17 at 92.977. That erased gains for the 
		week, and set the index up for a 0.09% decline.
 
 The safe-haven dollar was hurt after Beijing injected new cash into the 
		financial system on Thursday, when Evergrande announced it would make 
		interest payments on an onshore bond.
 
 However, some holders of its offshore bonds said they had not received 
		coupon payments by a Thursday deadline. More dollar bond interest is due 
		next week.
 
 
		
		 
		The dollar gained 0.16% to 110.57 yen for the first time since Aug. 11 
		as benchmark U.S. Treasury yields climbed as high as 1.452% in Tokyo, a 
		level not seen since July 2. Yields were last at 1.4097%.
 
 Hawkish comments from the Bank of England (BOE) on Thursday pushed up 
		yields globally, a day after the U.S. Federal Reserve said it could 
		start reducing its monthly bond purchases by as soon as November, and 
		that interest rates could rise quicker than expected by next year.
 
 The BOE said two of its policymakers had voted for an early end to 
		pandemic-era government bond-buying, and markets brought forward their 
		expectations for an interest rate rise to March.
 
 "Evergrande's fate remains uncertain, but markets are now less concerned 
		about any potential systemic impact, leaving room for risk assets to 
		rally," said ING's Francesco Pesole and Chris Turner in a morning note 
		to clients.
 
 "Improved sentiment has weighed on the dollar, which is also discounting 
		markets' reluctance to align with the Fed's Dot Plot." The Dot Plot 
		refers to a Fed chart that maps out the bank's expectations for interest 
		rates in the future.
 
		
		 
		
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			U.S. dollar banknotes are seen in this photo illustration taken 
			February 12, 2018. REUTERS/Jose Luis Gonzalez/Illustration/File 
			Photo 
            
			
			 
Cryptocurrencies fell after China intensified a crackdown on cryptocurrency 
trading on Friday, vowing to root out "illegal" activity and banning crypto 
mining nationwide.
 Bitcoin, the world's largest cryptocurrency, dropped over 7% to $41,419.
 
 Smaller coins, which typically rise and fall in tandem with bitcoin, also 
tumbled. Ether fell 10% while XRP a similar amount.
 
Elsewhere in fiat currencies, sterling was 0.3% lower at $1.3685 after rising as 
far as $1.3750 overnight for the first time since Sept. 20.
 The euro was mostly flat at $1.1731, after recovering from a more than one-month 
low of $1.16835 reached on Thursday.
 
 The risk-sensitive Australian dollar lost 0.5% to $0.7258 after touching a 
one-week high of $0.73165. Its New Zealand counterpart also lost 0.5% to 
$0.7033.
 
 Westpac sees the dollar index flat to slightly higher into the end of the year, 
but keeping to a 92.0-93.5 range in the near term.
 
 "The Fed's clear taper signal and inching forward of rate lift-off plans, not to 
mention ongoing uncertainty around Evergrande, should contain the downside," 
Westpac strategists wrote in a report.
 
 
 
Meanwhile, National Australia Bank said a sharp decline in dollar sentiment 
would be needed to hit its year-end target of 89.6 for the dollar index, "and 
there are no obvious short-term triggers" for that, strategists wrote in a 
research note.
 
Several Fed officials are due to speak on Friday, including Chair Jerome Powell, 
who gives opening remarks at a Fed Listens event.
 (Reporting by Ritvik Carvalho; additional reporting by Kevin Buckland in Tokyo, 
Editing by Timothy Heritage and Steve Orlofsky)
 
				 
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