Euro ignores inflation jump, dollar awaits U.S. job data
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[January 07, 2022] By
Julien Ponthus
LONDON (Reuters) - The dollar retreated
slightly on Friday but was still on course for an on-week gain before
the release of U.S. labour data that investors think could reinforce the
case for early Federal Reserve interest rate hikes.
While markets eagerly awaited the U.S. job update, traders were unmoved
by euro zone inflation rising to 5% in December, a record high figure
that was above analysts' consensus forecast for 4.7%.
The euro ticked down after the data and settled just above the flotation
mark against the dollar with a modest 0.04% rise to $1.1304.
"Normally, a high inflation reading implies a currency to rise because
its central bank tends to raise interest rates accordingly," commented
Ulrich Leuchtmann, head of FX and commodity research at Commerzbank in
Frankfurt.
"But 'normally' does not apply in this case to the euro because the ECB
is on 'wait and see'," he said.
Euro zone policymakers have repeatedly said they expect inflation to
gradually slow down in 2022 and expressed confidence a rate hike will
likely prove unnecessary this year.
"There is no reason in this case to get bullish on the euro as the
surprise was not large enough to change expectations, one would need a
massive surprise but this data is not large enough," Leuchtmann argued.
Earlier data showed German exports grew in November despite persisting
supply bottlenecks in manufacturing, while industrial output fell.
At 1205 GMT, the dollar index which measures the greenback against major
peers, was down 0.07% at 96.189 and set for weekly gains of about 0.5%.
The yen has been the most prominent casualty of the dollar's strength in
the first trading week of the year, as investors reckon the Bank of
Japan will lag others on rate hikes.
The greenback hit a five-year peak on the yen at 116.35 on Tuesday and
hovered around 115.80 on Friday.
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A U.S. one dollar banknote is seen in this illustration taken
November 23, 2021. REUTERS/Murad Sezer/Illustration
It is up about 0.6% on the yen this week and about 2.7% over five weeks. The
dollar is also eyeing its best week in more than a month against the Australian
and New Zealand dollars.
The release on Federal Reserve meeting minutes on Wednesday supported
expectations that the Fed could raise rates as soon as March and several times
this year, pushing up U.S. yields and the currency.
On Thursday, St. Louis Fed President James Bullard said the Fed could start
reducing its balance sheet soon after it begins hiking. Even dovish San
Francisco Fed President Mary Daly said the balance sheet reduction would follow
normalising rates.
"It's a surprise the dollar hasn't done better this week on the surge in
Treasury yields and the hawkish FOMC minutes", said Kenneth Broux, an FX
strategist at Societe Generale in London.
Elsewhere, sterling has held its own this week as traders figure the Bank of
England will soon begin its own hiking path. It last bought $1.3547, not far
from Tuesday's two-month high of $1.3599. It is near a two-year high on the
euro.
The big moves in the U.S. bond market have unsettled traders' sentiment across
asset classes. Cryptocurrencies have dropped sharply in thin holiday trade.
Bitcoin hit its lowest since September in Asia trading at $40,939 but recouped
some losses and ticked up to $42,339.
(Reporting by Julien Ponthus, Saikat Chatterjee in London and Tom Westbrook in
Sydney; Editing by Jacqueline Wong, Edmund Blair and Hugh Lawson)
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