Dollar retreats

- Advertisement -

SINGAPORE- The US  dollar perched near a two-month peak on Wednesday as investors looked to the Federal Reserve chair’s speech this week for cues on the path of monetary policy, while the yen loitered near 146 a dollar, keeping traders guessing on any intervention.

The dollar index which measures the US  currency against six rivals, was at 103.55, not far from the two-month high of 103.71 it touched on Tuesday. The index is up 1.6 percent  in August and is on course to snap its two-month losing streak.

The currency market is subdued amid a lull in summer volatility and ahead of the Fed’s central bank symposium at Jackson Hole, Wyoming, this week, said currency strategist Christopher Wong at OCBC in Singapore.

- Advertisement -spot_img

With traders reluctant to place major bets, the spotlight is firmly on Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s speech at the event, which is set for Aug. 24-26. Investors will parse through his words to gauge the Fed’s monetary policy path.

A recent run of strong US  economic data has helped allay worries of an impending recession but with inflation still well above the Fed’s target of 2 percent , investors are wary that the central bank may keep interest rates in a higher range for longer.

“Markets are looking out for hints of earlier (policy) shifts or extensions of higher for longer,” said Wong.

Richmond Fed President Thomas Barkin on Tuesday said the Fed must be open to the possibility that the economy will begin to re-accelerate rather than slow, with potential implications for the US  central bank’s inflation fight.

Markets are pricing in an 86 percent  chance of the Fed standing pat at its policy meeting next month, the CME FedWatch tool showed, but the odds of the US  central bank hiking interest rates one more time this year toward the end of the year have been rising.

The potential for additional hikes after a likely pause at its September meeting, combined with a decrease in excess savings, could weaken consumer momentum toward the end of the year, said Saira Malik, CIO at Nuveen.

The yen strengthened 0.20 percent  to 145.59 a dollar in Asian hours but was not far off the nine-month milestone of 146.565 touched last week, leaving traders on tenterhooks as they warily watch for any signs of intervention.

Author

Share post: