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				With war in Ukraine entering a third month and growing concerns 
				of a China-wide COVID-19 outbreak sparking a rout in Chinese 
				stocks, investors dumped currency market darlings like the 
				Aussie and the offshore Chinese yuan.
 Against a basket of its rivals, the dollar gained 0.6% to 
				101.62, a level it last tested in March 2020, and is on track 
				for its biggest daily rise since March 11.
 
 "The dollar will stay supported before the Fed meeting next week 
				and many commodity currencies that have done well this year are 
				now seeing the bar raised," said Kenneth Broux, a currency 
				strategist at Societe Generale in London.
 
 The Aussie, which was one of the biggest gainers in currencies 
				in the first quarter of 2022 thanks to surging commodity prices, 
				fell widely. It weakened more than 1% against the U.S. dollar 
				and fell by a similar margin versus the Swiss franc.
 
 The Norwegian crown also fell more than 1% versus the dollar.
 
 BofA Securities strategists said that despite the pick up in 
				currency market volatility, investors were long the Canadian 
				dollar, Aussie and the euro.
 
 The euro's tiny gains after French President Emmanuel Macron's 
				comfortable election victory over far-right rival Marine Le Pen 
				quickly dissipated, with the single currency down 0.8% at 
				$1.0729.
 
 Latest positioning data for last week showed hedge funds trimmed 
				their long euro bets.
 
 Hawkish comments by various policymakers last week also raised 
				the risks of aggressive policy tightening by global central 
				banks. Money markets expect the Fed to raise interest rates by a 
				half point at the next two meetings and the European Central 
				Bank to raise interest rates by 25 basis points in July.
 
 China's yuan fell to a one-year low. Broader currency market 
				volatility gauges ticked higher, with an index rising to its 
				highest levels in more than a month.
 
 (Reporting by Saikat Chatterjee Editing by Catherine Evans and 
				Mark Potter)
 
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