By Kevin Buckland TOKYO (Reuters) - The dollar languished near a six-week low to the yen amid a sharp retreat in Treasury yields after investors interpreted a shrinking U.S. economy as one more reason for the Federal Reserve to ease its foot off the tightening pedal.
By Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss
NEW YORK (Reuters) – The dollar dropped to a three-week low in choppy trading on Friday, as investor concerns about recession outweighed inflation worries, for now, amid a mixed batch of economic data.
There was also a lot of month-end position-squaring, analysts said.
Earlier, U.S. economic numbers showed that inflation continued its red-hot rise in June, keeping the Federal Reserve on track to raise interest rates as aggressively as it deems necessary.
The personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index jumped 1.0% last month, the largest increase since September 2005 and followed a 0.6% gain in May. In the 12 months through June, the PCE price index advanced 6.8%, the biggest gain since January 1982.
Excluding the volatile food and energy components, the PCE price index shot up 0.6% after climbing 0.3% in May.
The dollar initially rose on the inflation numbers, but gains fizzled amid the final University of Michigan report showing consumers’ inflation expectations slipped in July.
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell had mentioned the Michigan survey last month as key behind the pivot to the more aggressive rate posture.
The greenback was also partly weighed down by data showing the Chicago manufacturing index falling to a 23-month low of 52.1 from a prior low of 56.0, according to Action Economics.
In afternoon trading, the dollar index, a measure of its value against six major currencies, slid 0.3% to 105.89. Earlier, it slid to a three-week trough of 105.53.
“Traders are engaging in some quarter-end position-squaring, preparing for a period in which inflation and growth rates subside, tilting interest differentials against the dollar,” said Karl Schamotta, chief market strategist at payments company Corpay in Toronto.
“Next week’s (U.S.) jobs report looms as a potential volatility catalyst, and no one wants to be caught offside if job creation slows more than expected,” Schamotta added.
Another key indicator, the U.S. employment cost index (ECI), also increased. The ECI, the broadest measure of labor costs, rose 1.3% last quarter after accelerating 1.4% in the January-March period, the Labor Department said on Friday.
The index is widely viewed as one of the better gauges of labor market slack and a predictor of core inflation.
Action Economics, in its blog after the U.S. data, said the ECI was one of the metrics that alarmed the Fed and caused its pivot to a 75 basis points hike.
Post-data on Friday, rates futures markets have priced in a 72% chance of a 50 basis points hike at the Fed’s September policy meeting, with a 28% probability of a 75-bps rate increase. .
The rates markets also predict that the fed funds rate will peak in February 2023. Pre-U.S. data, futures were betting that top in the fed funds rate would hit this December.
The euro rose 0.2% versus the dollar to $1.0213.
Against the yen, the dollar slid 0.7% to 133.42 yen. The greenback also posted its largest monthly percentage fall since July 2020.
The yen was the primary short bet of the widening interest rate differential trade between the United States and its global peers, with net shorts on the currency, despite a recent pullback, above historical averages at $5.4 billion.
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Currency bid prices at 4:02PM (2002 GMT)
Description RIC Last U.S. Close Pct Change YTD Pct High Bid Low Bid
Previous Change
Session
Dollar index 105.8800 106.2100 -0.30% 10.680% +106.6700 +105.5300
Euro/Dollar $1.0220 $1.0196 +0.23% -10.11% +$1.0255 +$1.0147
Dollar/Yen 133.3200 134.2300 -0.66% +15.84% +134.6700 +132.5050
Euro/Yen 136.25 136.88 -0.46% +4.55% +137.3200 +135.5600
Dollar/Swiss 0.9516 0.9550 -0.32% +4.35% +0.9593 +0.9504
Sterling/Dollar $1.2177 $1.2184 -0.05% -9.96% +$1.2245 +$1.2065
Dollar/Canadian 1.2805 1.2805 +0.01% +1.29% +1.2855 +1.2790
Aussie/Dollar $0.6987 $0.6993 -0.09% -3.89% +$0.7031 +$0.6912
Euro/Swiss 0.9727 0.9737 -0.10% -6.19% +0.9753 +0.9700
Euro/Sterling 0.8390 0.8374 +0.19% -0.12% +0.8415 +0.8369
NZ $0.6289 $0.6291 -0.02% -8.11% +$0.6329 +$0.6222
Dollar/Dollar
Dollar/Norway 9.6615 9.7335 -0.65% +9.77% +9.7435 +9.6635
Euro/Norway 9.8820 9.9125 -0.31% -1.31% +9.9722 +9.8548
Dollar/Sweden 10.1571 10.1995 -0.20% +12.63% +10.2425 +10.1292
Euro/Sweden 10.3811 10.4020 -0.20% +1.50% +10.4260 +10.3699
(Reporting by Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss; Additional reporting by Saikat Chatterjee in London; Editing by Robert Birsel, Toby Chopra, Will Dunham and Jonathan Oatis)
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