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		Dollar continues dream run, little stands in its way
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		 [July 07, 2022]  By 
		Hari Kishan 
 BENGALURU (Reuters) - The U.S. dollar will 
		remain strong for at least the next three months as it basks in both 
		expectations for aggressive Federal Reserve interest rate rises and 
		safe-haven appeal stemming from global recession fears, a Reuters poll 
		of FX analysts showed.
 
 The recent sell-off in risk assets and bond markets is also playing into 
		a broad dollar rally against nearly every other currency, to levels not 
		seen in two decades. Analysts say there is no good reason to expect it 
		to stall yet.
 
 Already up a hefty 7% last year, the dollar has soared another 12% this 
		year, consistently exceeding nearly every forecaster's expectations on 
		how long its winning streak would last.
 
 A three-quarters majority of analysts, 37 of 48, in a separate question 
		from the July 1-6 Reuters FX poll expect that trend to continue for at 
		least another three months.
 
 Of those, 19 said three to six months, 10 said six to 12 months, four 
		said at least a year and four said at least two years. Only 11 
		respondents said less than three months.
 
		
		 
		Yet despite near-term strength, the median forecast from the latest poll 
		of nearly 70 analysts doggedly clings to a long-held view that the 
		dollar will weaken in the coming 12 months, despite the euro now trading 
		at its weakest in two decades.
 "Ultimately, people who say the dollar is going to weaken because the 
		market is not pricing in as many interest rate hikes from the Fed as 
		before are forgetting that the dollar is also a safe haven," said Jane 
		Foley, head of FX strategy at Rabobank.
 
 "If we are, coincidentally, looking at a potential recession in the euro 
		zone and the UK, and if global growth is coming down...what are you 
		going to buy if you sell the dollar?"
 
 While the lack of alternatives is likely to keep the dollar well-bid 
		against nearly all currencies, the greenback's strength will be most 
		acutely felt by the ones who have little to no interest rate backing 
		them.
 
		Indeed, the euro, the Japanese yen and the British pound, whose central 
		banks have either not hiked rates or failed to keep up with the Fed's 
		aggressive policy tightening, have weakened by double-digit percentages 
		this year.
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			A picture illustration shows U.S. 100 dollar bank notes taken in 
			Tokyo August 2, 2011. REUTERS/Yuriko Nakao 
            
			 
Minutes of June's policy meeting revealed concerns that worsening inflation 
would erase faith in the Fed's ability to control it. That has pushed the 
central bank to embark on the most aggressive tightening cycle in decades - 
knocking markets on recession fears.
 Down over 10% for the year, the euro is forecast to gain nearly 8.0% to around 
$1.10 by mid-2023, according to the median.
 
 However, that 12-month view was the lowest median 12-month euro prediction in 
five years, and nine analysts expect it to reach or breach parity by mid-2023.
 
 The Japanese yen, the worst performer among majors, is down nearly 15% for the 
year and will likely remain weaker than 130 per dollar over the next six months 
on the gap between Japanese and U.S. benchmark yields and monetary policy. [JPY/POLL]
 
 Sterling, down nearly 12% against the dollar since the start of this year, is 
expected to regain around half of its lost ground in 2022 over the next year as 
the Bank of England looks set to continue raising interest rates. [GBP/POLL]
 
 But in the near-term, a host of issues is likely to keep the currency under 
pressure.
 
 Emerging market currencies will also struggle to stem losses against the 
greenback in the near-term as investors seek the safety of dollar denominated 
assets.
 
 
While China's tightly controlled yuan, the Indian rupee and the Malaysian 
ringgit were predicted to trade around where they are now over the next three to 
six months, the Russian rouble and Turkey's lira were expected to fall.
 (Reporting by Hari Kishan; Additional reporting by Vivek Mishra and Vuyani Ndaba; 
Polling by Sujith Pai and Sarupya Ganguly; Editing by Ross Finley and Josie Kao)
 
				 
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