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		Dollar edges back towards one-month low
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		 [May 26, 2022]  By 
		Samuel Indyk 
 LONDON (Reuters) - The U.S. dollar edged 
		back towards a one-month low on Thursday, as minutes from the Federal 
		Reserve's May meeting contained few surprises, with most participants 
		favouring additional 50 basis point rate hikes at the June and July 
		meetings.
 
 The dollar index, which measures the currency against six major peers, 
		was down 0.2% at 101.83 as the minutes showed the Fed is likely to stay 
		the course for now, but keep its options open for a range of policy 
		choices after July.
 
 The index has mostly been consolidating around 102 after a short-lived 
		bounce immediately following Wednesday's release of the minutes.
 
 Analysts noted that expedited tightening would allow some wiggle room if 
		the Fed wanted to slow the tightening cycle in the second half of the 
		year.
 
 "That base case makes sense from where we're at now, a couple of 50 
		basis point rate hikes, and then see where we're at," said Giles Coghlan, 
		Director at GCFX.
 
 The dollar index reached a nearly two-decade peak above 105 mid-month, 
		but signs that aggressive Fed action may already be slowing economic 
		growth have prompted traders to scale back tightening bets, with 
		Treasury yields also dropping from multi-year highs.
 
 The implied yield on the eurodollar futures June 2023 contract -- 
		essentially where markets see interest rates to be at that point -- is 
		down some 80 basis points this month.
 
 
		
		 
		ING believes there is room for this to reverse, with the Fed believing 
		the economy is strong enough to withstand rapid tightening.
 
 "Fed speak and the U.S. data calendar suggests those higher levels for 
		the Fed terminal rate could easily be put back into the market - which 
		is dollar supportive," ING analysts said in an emailed note.
 
 The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield was last down 1.4 basis points at 
		2.7308%, after earlier dropping to its lowest level since April 14.
 
		
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			 U.S. dollar banknotes are displayed in this illustration taken, 
			February 14, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/File Photo 
            
			 
China's yuan weakened past a key threshold to a near one-week low against the 
dollar as investors were disappointed that a rare high-profile meeting featuring 
Premier Li Keqiang to support the economy failed to yield any fresh policy 
measures. 
The offshore yuan dropped more than half a percent to 6.75 yuan per dollar. [CNY/]
 The euro rose 0.35% to $1.0716, while the dollar fell 0.4% to 126.76 yen.
 
 Risk-sensitive currencies, such as the Aussie, kiwi and loonie were all trading 
broadly flat against the dollar.
 
 Sterling rose to a three-week high of $1.26165 ahead of an expected announcement 
from British Chancellor Rishi Sunak on a package of measures to help consumers 
cope with rising energy bills.
 
 Meanwhile, bitcoin was last trading 1.1% lower at $29,166. Smaller rival ether 
was lower by over 5%.
 
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 GRAPHIC: Eurodollar futures (https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
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 (Reporting by Samuel Indyk, additional reporting by Kevin Buckland; Editing by 
Emelia Sithole-Matarise, Kirsten Donovan)
 
				 
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