Dollar retreats for now, as investors await U.S. jobs data
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[October 07, 2022]
By Amanda Cooper
LONDON (Reuters) -The dollar retreated on
Friday, ahead of a key employment report later that could offer a litmus
test of the strength of the U.S. economic recovery, but with the Federal
Reserve's commitment to fighting inflation, strategists believe any
weakness won't last.
The euro and the pound pared overnight losses and rose for the first
time in three trading sessions, while the Japanese yen clawed back from
another break through the key 145 level against the dollar.
Overnight, a number of Fed officials reinforced the view that the
central bank is nowhere near finished with raising rates as it seeks to
tame inflation, and rates are expected to go up further.
The September non-farm payrolls report comes hot on the heels of a
measure of private-sector hiring that beat expectations and an indicator
of vacancies that showed an unexpected decline, offering a mixed picture
of the jobs market.
Consumer inflation data is due next week and could prove equally
influential in setting investors' expectations for the Fed, according to
CIBC head of G10 currency strategy Jeremy Stretch.
"We're going into a 'double-header' next week," he said.
"Until we see what is effectively almost empirical evidence that either
the labour market is materially easing or inflationary pressures are
dissipating, dollar dips are going to remain bought into," he said.
The euro was last up 0.1% on the day at $0.9801, having tried twice
unsuccessfully to regain parity this week.
Sterling rose 0.3% to $1.1192, having fallen 1.4% overnight. It rose to
as much as $1.1493 earlier this week, after the British government
reversed a planned cut to the highest rate of income tax.
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A picture illustration shows U.S.
100-dollar bank notes taken in Tokyo August 2, 2011. REUTERS/Yuriko
Nakao
The U.S. dollar index eased 0.1% to 112.11, after rising nearly 1%
overnight, and was set for a decline of 0.16% this week.
All eyes now turn to the U.S. non-farm payrolls report due at 1230
GMT. Economists expect 250,000 jobs to have been added last month,
compared with 315,000 in August.
"With the Fed seeing evidence of success, we should not expect a
shift in rhetoric, no matter what the NFP print is today. That in
our view means the US dollar will remain under upward pressure,"
MUFG head of research Derek Halpenny said in a note.
"Any US dollar weakness on a weak NFP print that fuels easing
expectations next year is, in our view, unlikely to last."
The yen was last up 0.2% against the dollar at 144.91 per dollar,
close to a 24-year low of 145.90 hit last month that prompted an
intervention by Japanese authorities to shore up the fragile
currency.
In another sign that major central banks' fight against inflation is
far from over, accounts from the European Central Bank's September
meeting show policymakers appeared increasingly worried that high
inflation could become entrenched, making aggressive policy
tightening necessary even at the cost of weaker growth.
(Additional reporting by Rae Wee in Singapore; Editing by Shri
Navaratnam, Ana Nicolaci da Costa, William Maclean)
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