SINGAPORE- The dollar rose broadly on Thursday as growth concerns about the US economy drove demand for the safe-haven greenback, while the yen renewed its ascent as investors doubled down on bets that the Bank of Japan would shift away from its yield curve control policy.
Weak US data released on Wednesday showed that US retail sales fell by the most in a year in December and manufacturing output recorded its biggest drop in nearly two years, stoking fears that the world’s largest economy is headed for a recession.
“Those weak data really reinforced market concerns about an imminent US recession … (which) really supported the dollar, and I think that will become a growing narrative in the coming months,” said Carol Kong, a currency strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA).
Sterling fell 0.17 percent to $1.2327, away from the previous session’s one-month high of $1.2435, while the Aussie skidded 0.49 percent to $0.6907, after suffering a 0.64 percent loss on Wednesday.
The euro shed 0.02 percent to stand at $1.0792, similarly some distance from Wednesday’s nine-month high of $1.08875, even as French central bank chief Francois Villeroy de Galhau maintained a hawkish stance over the European Central Bank’s future rate-hike path.
The fresh wave of risk aversion – compounded by news of job cuts by tech giants Microsoft and Amazon – also kept the dollar in bid.
“The effects of the FOMC tightening will just become more and more visible,” Kong said.
However, the greenback failed to eke out a gain against the Japanese yen and was last 0.4 percent lower at 128.42 yen, unwinding most of its previous day’s rally in the immediate aftermath of the BOJ’s decision to stand pat on its ultra-loose monetary policy.