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		King dollar, you reign supreme
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		 [July 07, 2022]  A 
		look at the day ahead in markets from Dhara Ranasinghe. 
 Whoever coined the phrase "king dollar" certainly had good reason for 
		doing so and currency trading this week only confirms that the epithet 
		holds true.
 
 With recession risks running high, the greenback appears to be an 
		ultimate safe-haven for investors.
 
 And the casualties of the dollar's surge? Let's count them: the euro is 
		fast heading towards parity even if it is holding above 20-year lows in 
		Europe this morning. The yen has slumped to its lowest levels in over 20 
		years, sterling is near its lowest since March 2020 and Russia's rouble 
		has slid 16% this week.
 
 Until the Federal Reserve shows signs of slowing its aggressive 
		rate-hiking cycle, little will change. Minutes of the Fed's June 
		meeting, released late Wednesday, FOMC confirmed the shift toward 
		prioritising price stability over full employment.
 
 No wonder then that Treasury yields shot up on Wednesday and the yield 
		curve, measured by the gap between two and 10-year bond yields, 
		continues to push further into inverted territory.
 
 It's a sign that bond markets suspect aggressive rate hikes to tame 
		inflation, raising the risk of the world's biggest economy tipping into 
		a recession.
 
 
		
		 
		Recession angst meanwhile lingers with world shares caught between 
		growth worries and relief that a slowdown might check a sharp rise in 
		borrowing costs.
 
 Asia shares have edged up from two-month flows and European stock and 
		U.S. equity futures are firmer.
 
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			U.S. dollar banknotes are displayed in this illustration taken, 
			February 14, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic 
            
			 
U.S. ADP payrolls data later on will likely be in focus ahead of Friday's 
non-farm payrolls report. 
 In the UK, markets have now factored in political turmoil, but headline continue 
to grab attention as British Prime Minister Boris Johnson defies pressure to 
quit and faces a mounting rebellion within his ruling party.
 
 And maybe that's just one more reason to stay away from sterling right now and 
play it safe by sticking with the dollar.
 
 Key developments that should provide more direction to markets on Thursday:
 
 - Russia’s Serge Lavrov attends two-day G20 foreign ministers meeting
 
 - St. Louis President James Bullard
 
 - ECB publishes minutes from 9 June meeting
 
 - UK house prices surge by 13% in 12 months to June, Halifax says
 
 - German industrial output rises less than expected in May - Reuters
 
 - US ADP payrolls/Trade (exports/imports)/initial jobless
 
 - Central bank meetings: Argentina, Poland, Peru, Sri Lanka, Serbia
 
 (Reporting by Dhara Ranasinghe; editing by Saikat Chatterjee)
 
 
				 
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