Dollar rises towards 20-year high, euro dips after weak data
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[May 02, 2022] LONDON
(Reuters) - The dollar rose back towards a 20-year high on Monday as the
euro struggled around the $1.05 mark, with investors preparing for a
busy week of central bank meetings including a likely Federal Reserve
interest rate hike.
The euro also came under pressure after a survey showed that euro zone
manufacturing output growth stalled last month as factories struggled to
source raw materials, while demand took a knock from steep price
increases.
Markets in Asia and London were closed for public holidays, so trading
was quiet.
Investors are expecting the Fed to hike rates by 50 basis points when it
meets on Tuesday and Wednesday. The uncertainty is around how hawkish
Fed Chair Jerome Powell will sound in comments following the decision.
Markets are pricing in an aggressive run of rate hikes from the Fed as
it tries to tame soaring inflation.
That, together with an expected slower rate of European Central Bank
tightening and worries about the impact of the war in Ukraine on the
euro zone economy, has sent investors scrambling for dollars and left
the euro at five-year lows.
The dollar index gained 5% in April, its best monthly performance since
January 2015.
"We expect the USD to stay strong versus the EUR, as a hawkish FOMC
(Federal Open Market Committee) stance and geopolitical concerns will
support the USD," UBS Global Wealth Management wrote in a research note.
"Short-term investors may look to sell rallies in EURUSD above $1.08."
The wealth manager has lowered its euro/dollar forecasts to $1.05 for
June from a previous $1.11, $1.06 for September, $1.08 for December and
$1.10 for March 2023.
The dollar index was last at 103.36, up 0.1% on the day. The euro lost
0.2% to $1.0525.
BNP Paribas strategists said last week that big speculative flows and
not concerns about a worsening economic outlook explained the euro's
slide to a five-year low below $1.05 this week.
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A street-side currency vendor holds U.S. dollars at Ferdowsi Square
in Tehran, Iran November 14, 2021. Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia
News Agency) via REUTERS/Files
YUAN UNDER PRESSURE
Elsewhere, the dollar gained half a percent on the Chinese yuan in offshore
markets, reaching 6.6895, just below its strongest since late 2020.
Sterling slipped 0.1% to $1.2570, while Japan's yen was down against the dollar
at 129.91 but off recent lows.
Other central bank meetings this week include the Bank of England on Thursday,
which is expected to raise rates by 25 basis points to 1%.
Steve Englander, head of global G10 FX Research at Standard Chartered, said
there was a reasonable case to be made for central bank intervention to weaken
the surging dollar.
But in the absence of policymakers outside the United States turning more
hawkish, intervention would not have a big impact, he added.
"We doubt intervention would have a sustained impact until the ECB and BoJ (Bank
of Japan) offer more policy rate support," he said.
The Australian and New Zealand dollars initially fell sharply in Asian hours as
a sell-off on Wall Street undermined risk appetite and overshadowed the prospect
of higher interest rates at home.
The Aussie bounced off three-month lows in European hours and was last at
$0.7074, unchanged on the day.
The Australian dollar shed 5.7% last month as European recessionary fears and
lockdowns in China undermined risk assets.
The Kiwi dollar hit its lowest since mid-2020 at $0.6422, having lost 6.9% in
April, before recovering to $0.6448.
(Reporting by Tommy Wilkes; Editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise and Jan Harvey)
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