Wednesday, June 2, 2021

Dollar gets respite from pick up in US manufacturing before jobs report

The dollar index, which measures the greenback against six rivals, hovered just below 90 after dipping to as low as 89.662 yesterday and approaching the lowest since January 7 at 89.533. — Reuters pic
The dollar index, which measures the greenback against six rivals, hovered just below 90 after dipping to as low as 89.662 yesterday and approaching the lowest since January 7 at 89.533. — Reuters pic

Follow us on Instagram and subscribe to our Telegram channel for the latest updates.


TOKYO, June 2 — The dollar clung to small gains from overnight today, edging back from near a five-month trough versus major peers, as a pick up in US manufacturing kept bets alive for a quicker normalisation of Federal Reserve policy.

The dollar index, which measures the greenback against six rivals, hovered just below 90 after dipping to as low as 89.662 yesterday and approaching the lowest since January 7 at 89.533.

Likewise, the euro traded at US$1.2222 (RM5.04) after pulling back from near a multi-month top overnight, when it climbed to US$1.22545.

Investors were also watching out the trajectory of China’s recently bullish yuan.

It was last at 6.3798 per dollar in offshore trading, after retreating from the three-year high of 6.3526 reached on Monday as policy makers took steps to cool its advance including raising banks’ FX reserve requirements.

Sterling also remained lower at US$1.4160 after easing off a three-year high of US$1.4250 reached yesterday, while the Canadian dollar was at C$1.20590 per greenback after rallying to a fresh six-year peak of C$1.2007 overnight as oil rose.

“The direction of the dollar is definitely the focus,” said Shinichiro Kadota, senior currency strategist at Barclays in Tokyo.

“The market is split in its view” on whether current inflationary pressures will be transitory, like the Fed says it is, or persist long enough to force policy makers to taper stimulus and raise rates earlier than they have so far signalled, Kadota said.

“Even if inflation continues to overshoot, I think the Fed will continue to say it’s temporary, but the market won’t know for sure until fall, so we’re kind of stuck in this uncertainty.”

Over the near term, the euro and yuan will be key in determining if the dollar remains on the back foot or stages a rebound, he said.

Yesterday, the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) said its index of US manufacturing activity rose in May as pent-up demand amid a reopening economy boosted orders.

The dollar initially traded lower on the report, in which ISM said manufacturing’s growth potential continued to be hampered by worker absenteeism and temporary shutdowns because of shortages of parts and labour.

Those employment shortcomings will be front and centre of investors’ minds on Friday with the release of nonfarm payrolls numbers for May, after April’s much-weaker-than-expected reading sent the dollar index slumping 0.7 per cent on May 7.

The index was mostly flat from yesterday at 89.877, but still well off Friday’s high of 90.447, when a measure of US inflation closely watched by the Fed posted its biggest annual rise since 1992. — Reuters




Source: Malay Mail

No comments:

Post a Comment