Though U.S. monthly underlying inflation pressures showed some
signs of moderation in Tuesday's data, traders ramped up bets
that the U.S. central bank will accelerate its monetary
tightening measures this year.
Also weighing on the euro was Russian President Vladimir Putin's
description of on-and-off negotiations to end the war in Ukraine
as "a dead-end situation" on Tuesday.
In addition, German lawmakers called for an embargo on Russian
oil as soon as possible, which if implemented would further
weigh on the region's growth prospects.
"The dollar will continue to do well versus the low yielders
such as the euro and the yen," said Kenneth Broux, an FX
strategist at Societe Generale in London.
"In contrast to German bond yields, the pre-ECB bounce in the
euro isn't happening," Broux said referring to the European
Central Bank's meeting on Thursday.
Against a basket of six major currencies, the dollar edged 0.1%
up to 100.52, its highest levels since April 2020. It has gained
nearly 3% so far this month and is on track for its biggest
monthly rise in nine months.
The yen led losers against the dollar with the Japanese unit
weakening 0.8% to cross the 126 yen to the dollar level for the
first time since May 2002.
Elsewhere, the kiwi was buffeted after the Reserve Bank of New
Zealand announced its sharpest rate hike in two decades to curb
inflation.
While the 50 basis point rise by was larger than many economists
had expected, it was within traders' expectations, and
policymakers tempered the move by not lifting their projected
peak for rates.
The euro fell to $1.0821 overnight, its lowest level against the
dollar in more than a month and hovered nearby at $1.0837 in
early London trading.
The Australian dollar and the offshore Chinese yuan weakened
slightly after a surprise plunge in China's imports added to
investor worries about weakening demand.
(Reporting by Saikat Chatterjee; Editing by Tomasz Janowski)
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