Market Watch: Dollar Holds Firm as Stock Values Decline

Dollar steadies as stocks slip
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: U.S. Dollar and Euro banknotes are seen in this illustration taken July 17, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

By Tom Westbrook

SINGAPORE (Reuters) – The dollar made a strong recovery on Thursday as the sudden end to a powerful U.S. stocks rally led investors to seek safety. The unexpected drop in British inflation also impacted the pound.

Sterling experienced its sharpest decline in two months overnight after British inflation unexpectedly fell to an annual 3.9% in October, reaching its lowest level in two years.

Traders quickly adjusted rate cut expectations and the currency dropped 0.7% to $1.2638. [GBP/]

“The data suggests that inflation momentum in the United Kingdom is finally losing steam, allowing the Bank of England to join the global rate cutting cycle next year,” said analyst Marios Hadjikyriacos of brokerage XM.

Elsewhere, significant selling in the final hour of equities trading on Wall Street led to a ripple of risk-aversion through markets, lifting the under-pressure greenback from lows.

The Australian and New Zealand dollars retreated from five-month highs. The was last at $0.6714, having touched its highest since July at $0.6779 a day earlier. The traded at $0.6257. [AUD/]

The euro was stable at $1.0943. The yen found support at 143.5 per dollar, after having lost ground on Tuesday when the Bank of Japan left its ultra-easy policy settings unchanged.

Currency markets’ next focus is on Friday’s release of the U.S. core personal consumption expenditure (PCE) index which is forecast by analysts to rise 0.2% in November with the annual inflation rate slowing to its lowest since 2021 at 3.3%.

Analysts suspect the balance of risk is on the downside and the slowdown in inflation means the Fed will have to ease policy just to stop real rates from rising.

But with 150 basis points of cuts already priced in next year, a massive rally in the bond market and the down more than 4% from an early November high, some signs of caution are creeping in.

“Some adjustments in positions and paring back of risks ahead of (this) event…is only sensible,” said OCBC currency strategist Christopher Wong in Singapore.

“Liquidity is getting thinner as we get closer to the festive season, thin liquidity can exacerbate price movements on any data surprises.”

The dollar index, down 1% for the year so far, was steady at 102.37 in early Asia trade on Thursday. Ten-year U.S. Treasury yields hit a seven-month low of 3.847% in New York.

slipped on the rising dollar in overnight offshore trade, and as traders see no let up in China’s accommodative monetary stance.

It was steady at 7.1480 to the dollar on Thursday. [CNY/]

leapt briefly above $44,000 on Wednesday and was steady at $43,667 on Thursday.

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Currency bid prices at 0045 GMT

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