Euro grinds higher as traders look to ECB for direction

The euro edged higher on Thursday as traders braced for a European Central Bank meeting to gauge policymakers’ views on the common currency’s recent appreciation and its impact on inflation.

Sterling steadied above a six-week low but could lose more ground due to growing concern that Britain and the European Union will fail to agree a trade deal.

While markets expect the ECB to keep policy steady, investors will closely watch President Christine Lagarde’s comments on how the euro’s rise to a two-year high this month affects the outlook for inflation and economic growth.

“The ECB is this week’s biggest event by far and there is a lot at stake,” said Masaru Ishibashi, joint general manager of trading at Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp.

“Most recently, the ECB downplayed inflation, but I want to see how Lagarde will approach this in her press conference. This will determine which way the euro goes.”

The euro bought $1.1821, holding onto a 0.3% gain from the previous session.

The British pound traded at $1.2993, recovering slightly from a dip to a six-week low of $1.2839 on Wednesday.

The pound fell to 90.98 pence per euro, approaching a six-week low.

Sentiment for cable has taken a hit after Britain unveiled draft legislation that analysts say raises the possibility of it exiting the EU single market in four months’ time with no trade agreement in place.

The dollar held steady against the safe-harbor Swiss franc at 0.9116 and was little changed at 106.11 yen.

The euro got a boost on Wednesday after Bloomberg News reported that ECB officials are growing more confident in the bloc’s economic outlook.

However, traders may be reluctant to buy the common currency further before the ECB meeting due to earlier media reports that officials are growing uncomfortable with the euro’s almost 6% appreciation against the dollar from its June low.

The ECB’s views are also in the spotlight after euro-zone consumer prices turned negative in August for the first time since 2016, and the U.S. Federal Reserve switched to focusing on average inflation.

“It’s possible that the ECB could try to out-dove the Fed if the euro appreciation goes too far, but whether that will be done via shifting to average inflation targeting or other means is hard to say,” Aidan Yao, senior emerging Asia economist at AXA Investment Managers in Hong Kong, told the Reuters Global Markets Forum.

With no major economic data scheduled during Asian trading, market moves could be subdued as investors wait for potential ECB catalysts.

Traders in the dollar are closely watching global equities because a rebound in U.S. tech shares from a rapid sell-off boosted Asian stocks, suggesting an improvement in risk appetite.

The dollar index against a basket of six major currencies was steady at 93.172.

Elsewhere, the Australian dollar fell to $0.7268 amid concerns abound worsening diplomatic ties with China over the treatment of the two countries’ journalists.

Investors are also nervously monitoring an outbreak of coronavirus infections in the state of Victoria.

Across the Tasman Sea, the New Zealand dollar eased slightly to $0.6681.

Euro grinds higher as traders look to ECB for direction

The euro edged higher on Thursday as traders braced for a European Central Bank meeting to gauge policymakers’ views on the common currency’s recent appreciation and its impact on inflation.

Sterling steadied above a six-week low but could lose more ground due to growing concern that Britain and the European Union will fail to agree a trade deal.

While markets expect the ECB to keep policy steady, investors will closely watch President Christine Lagarde’s comments on how the euro’s rise to a two-year high this month affects the outlook for inflation and economic growth.

“The ECB is this week’s biggest event by far and there is a lot at stake,” said Masaru Ishibashi, joint general manager of trading at Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp.

“Most recently, the ECB downplayed inflation, but I want to see how Lagarde will approach this in her press conference. This will determine which way the euro goes.”

The euro bought $1.1821, holding onto a 0.3% gain from the previous session.

The British pound traded at $1.2993, recovering slightly from a dip to a six-week low of $1.2839 on Wednesday.

The pound fell to 90.98 pence per euro, approaching a six-week low.

Sentiment for cable has taken a hit after Britain unveiled draft legislation that analysts say raises the possibility of it exiting the EU single market in four months’ time with no trade agreement in place.

The dollar held steady against the safe-harbor Swiss franc at 0.9116 and was little changed at 106.11 yen.

The euro got a boost on Wednesday after Bloomberg News reported that ECB officials are growing more confident in the bloc’s economic outlook.

However, traders may be reluctant to buy the common currency further before the ECB meeting due to earlier media reports that officials are growing uncomfortable with the euro’s almost 6% appreciation against the dollar from its June low.

The ECB’s views are also in the spotlight after euro-zone consumer prices turned negative in August for the first time since 2016, and the U.S. Federal Reserve switched to focusing on average inflation.

“It’s possible that the ECB could try to out-dove the Fed if the euro appreciation goes too far, but whether that will be done via shifting to average inflation targeting or other means is hard to say,” Aidan Yao, senior emerging Asia economist at AXA Investment Managers in Hong Kong, told the Reuters Global Markets Forum.

With no major economic data scheduled during Asian trading, market moves could be subdued as investors wait for potential ECB catalysts.

Traders in the dollar are closely watching global equities because a rebound in U.S. tech shares from a rapid sell-off boosted Asian stocks, suggesting an improvement in risk appetite.

The dollar index against a basket of six major currencies was steady at 93.172.

Elsewhere, the Australian dollar fell to $0.7268 amid concerns abound worsening diplomatic ties with China over the treatment of the two countries’ journalists.

Investors are also nervously monitoring an outbreak of coronavirus infections in the state of Victoria.

Across the Tasman Sea, the New Zealand dollar eased slightly to $0.6681.

Dollar firms, yen up as tech selloff hits forex

The dollar found support on Wednesday as a stock market slide spooked investors into selling riskier currencies, while worries about Brexit pushed the pound down to a new six-week low.

The moves have made for a nearly 2% bounce in the greenback, against a basket of currencies, from the more than two-year lows it touched earlier in the month. The safe-haven yen also climbed to a one-week high of 105.83 per dollar.

“The tech selloff has caught the market by surprise and it is a bit jittery as to whether there are broader implications,” said Bank of Singapore currency analyst Moh Siong Sim.

“It might force some position unwinding in other parts of the market, and that’s probably what we’re seeing right now,” he said. The dollar has been sliding since March.

In the Asia session the dollar was mostly steady, pulling back from early gains on most majors as U.S. equity futures pared losses – with Nasdaq 100 futures swinging to trade 0.6% higher in the afternoon and S&P 500 futures flat.

The risk-sensitive Antipodean currencies crept from two-week lows with the futures trade, to leave the Aussie ahead 0.2% at $0.7226 and the kiwi steady at $0.6621.

Sterling was unable to shake pressure as fears grow that Britain is preparing to undercut its Brexit divorce treaty. It dipped 0.2% to $1.2950, its lowest since the end of July.

The pound also languished at a six-week low of 90.57 pence against the euro and 137.04 yen.

Britain will set out its blueprint for life outside the European Union on Wednesday, publishing legislation a government minister acknowledged would break international law in a “limited way.”

“This could derail trade negotiations with the European Union and further weigh on sterling,” said Commonwealth Bank of Australia currency analyst Elias Haddad.

An overnight slump in the oil price dragged down oil exporters’ currencies.

The Norwegian krone extended an overnight fall to hit a more than six-week low of 9.1840 per dollar.

The Canadian dollar dropped to a three-week low though steadied in Asia ahead of a Bank of Canada policy decision due at 1400 GMT. Investors expect no changes to interest rates and will focus on the tone around the outlook.

The euro was also steady as investors await Thursday’s European Central Bank meeting with some trepidation.

The common currency has lost about 2% since posting a 28-month high above $1.20 on September 1, spurred lower by comments from ECB chief economist Philip Lane, who said the exchange rate mattered to monetary policy.

Any hint of concern at the currency’s rise, or that low inflation will require ultra-easy policy for a very long time could whack the euro lower again and boost the dollar.

“Lane appears to have succeeded in drawing a line in the sand at $1.20 at least for the time being,” said Rabobank senior FX strategist Jane Foley. “We see scope that euro/dollar could dip further towards the $1.17 level on a one-month view.”

The euro last traded at $1.1772.

In emerging Asia the Indonesian rupiah was kept under pressure by concerns about the independence of the central bank after parliament started reviewing proposals for a Monetary Council that would allow ministers a vote at policy meetings.

Bank Indonesia said it intervened in the spot market to smooth volatility, but the rupiah still dropped 0.6%.

Other EM currencies also traded under pressure, notably the Turkish lira, which fell to a record low on Tuesday and is within a whisker of the 7.5 per dollar mark.

Dollar bides time ahead of ECB, Brexit woes hit sterling

The dollar held steady on Tuesday as investors weighed whether an accommodative turn from the European Central Bank later this week could hit the euro, while the pound nursed losses due to Brexit uncertainty.

A day after thin holiday trade, the greenback was slightly stronger against a basket of currencies at 93.128 and firmed marginally against the euro at $1.1809.

Moves in the Asian day were modest, but had the dollar back under gentle pressure as risk appetite appeared to return to equity markets.

The Australian dollar stood at $0.7276 and the New Zealand dollar was little changed at $0.6685, having hit lows overnight following a Sunday statement from the central bank which again raised the prospect of negative rates.

The main focus this week is on the European Central Bank’s policy decision on Thursday.

Most analysts don’t expect a change in the central bank’s policy stance but are looking to the message on its inflation forecasts and whether it seems concerned by the euro’s strength.

The meeting comes after the single currency marked a two-year high just above $1.20 at the beginning of the month, until comments about its level from ECB chief economist Philip Lane knocked it lower.

“The ECB could raise more concerns over a further appreciation in the euro and make some downward revisions to its inflation projections,” said Commonwealth Bank of Australia currency analyst Kim Mundy, which would flag easier policy.

“In our view, the dollar can lift further over the remainder of the week because of the possibility the ECB takes a sharper dovish turn.”

Elsewhere, the dollar traded firmly against the Japanese yen amid talk of a snap election – something that Yoshihide Suga, frontrunner to succeed Shinzo Abe in next week’s leadership ballot – signaled in a newspaper interview.

Analysts say many currency market participants no longer consider the leadership race as a catalyst, as the next leader is likely to follow Abe’s policy path.

“Around eight years ago (when Abe took over), the yen was stronger at around 70 per dollar. But with the current dollar/yen level, there’s nothing much the successor can do currency-wise,” said Daisuke Karakama, chief market strategist at Mizuho Bank.

“The stronger local equity market should be more of a concern instead,” he said.

The yen last changed hands at 106.29 per dollar.

The British pound, meanwhile, was the laggard amid a fresh crisis in EU-UK trade negotiations.

A Financial Times report suggesting Britain might legislate to override its Brexit withdrawal agreement prompted the EU to warn there would be no deal if that happened, raising the prospect again of a hard Brexit.

New talks are due to begin in London later on Tuesday.

The pound edged 0.2% lower to $1.3146, after shedding 0.8% overnight, and sat a fraction above a two-week low against the euro at 89.76 pence.

Some traders also sold sterling against the yen, last traded at 139.63, hovering near a two-week low of 139.58 it hit in the previous session.

“The key question for markets is whether the remarks are still mostly brinkmanship as negotiations near the finish line,” said NAB economics director Tapas Strickland. “The mild market reaction suggests markets think so and still sniff a deal.”

Meanwhile, data in Australia showed employment eased over the month to August 22, while last month’s business confidence gained but remained fragile.

Japan’s economy shrank an annualized 28.1% in April-June, worse than the initial estimate of a 27.8% contraction, revised data from the Cabinet Office showed on Tuesday.

Crude oil futures up 0.33% to Rs 3,054 per barrel

The dollar steadied against major currencies on Friday as traders awaited key U.S. jobs data that may cast doubt on the strength of economic recovery from the coronavirus outbreak.

The Australian dollar clawed back early losses and stabilized after the country’s retail sales accelerated in July, easing concern about the economy.

The greenback has managed to halt its recent slide, but analysts warn sentiment remains weak due to concern about the strength of U.S. economic growth and speculation that the Federal Reserve will keep rates low for a very long time.

“The dollar has rebounded against the euro and could continue to rise a little further,” said Junichi Ishikawa, senior foreign exchange strategist at IG Securities in Tokyo.

“However, my main scenario is for the dollar to fall, for stocks to rise and for yields to fall because the Fed is expected to stick with low interest rates.”

Against the euro, the dollar stood at $1.1851 in Asia on Friday, extending a pullback from a two-year low hit on Tuesday.

The British pound bought $1.3285, retreating from its highest level in almost a year due to a lack of progress in trade negotiations between Britain and the European Union.

The greenback was quoted at 0.9096 Swiss franc.

Against the yen, the dollar traded at 106.18.

Data due later on Friday is expected to show U.S. non-farm payrolls grew by 1.4 million in August, which would be slower than the 1.763 million jobs created in the previous month.

There are growing signs the labor market recovery from the depths of the pandemic is faltering, with financial support from the government virtually depleted.

The U.S. central bank last week overhauled its policy framework to focus more on addressing shortfalls in employment and less on inflation, which would allow it to keep rates lower for longer periods, which is a negative for the dollar.

Chicago Fed President Charles Evans said on Thursday the bank could promise to keep interest rates pinned near zero until inflation reaches 2.5%, well above current low levels and modestly above the inflation target of 2%.

The dollar index against a basket of six major currencies was little changed in Asia on Friday at 92.759.

The dollar’s downtrend will continue for at least another three months due to the outlook for the Fed’s monetary policy, a Reuters poll of analysts showed on Friday.

The Antipodean currencies initially fell slightly, tracking the broader loss of investor confidence as a sell-off in U.S. tech shares hit Asian stocks and a closely-watched measure of market volatility hit a 10-week high.

However, the looming U.S. jobs data brought investors back to a more measured posture.

The Australian dollar steadied at $0.7275, supported after local retail sales accelerated in July.

Across the Tasman Sea, the New Zealand dollar erased losses to trade to $0.6712.

Dollar buoyed by upbeat U.S. economic data; Aussie falls

The dollar bounced off two-year lows on Wednesday as U.S. data pointed to a firm manufacturing activity, while the euro retreated from its highest levels since 2018 on profit-taking.

Economic data published on Tuesday showed U.S. manufacturing activity accelerated to a nearly two-year high in August amid a surge in new orders, with the reading from the Institute for Supply Management at its highest level since November 2018.

The U.S. data followed similarly upbeat Chinese and European manufacturing indicators.

Analysts said that an increase in pent-up demand has contributed to the rise in the greenback.

“In hindsight, it was a strong data,” said Rikiya Takebe, senior strategist at Okasan Online Securities.

“But when you look closely into the eighteen industries, not all of them registered growth in employment… there wasn’t an improvement in employment overall,” he said.

The dollar index inched up 0.5% at 92.80, having hit its lowest since April 2018 of 91.737.

Separate data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics showed Australia suffered its worst economic fall in quarterly domestic product on record last quarter as the coronavirus pushed the country into recession.

Following the data announcement, the Australian dollar fell 0.5% to $0.7348 before retracing some losses at $0.73560.

The greenback has been declining since last week, down about 1%, after the Federal Reserve announced it would focus more on average inflation and higher employment. With the Fed’s shift in policy having leeway to keep U.S. interest rates lower for longer, it has encouraged traders to sell the currency.

That view was reinforced on Tuesday as Fed Governor Lael Brainard said the central bank would need to roll out more stimulus to help the economy overcome the coronavirus and fulfill the Fed’s new pledge.

U.S. Treasury yields fell following the speech as additional stimulus would likely involve more aggressive bond-buying.

The euro benefited from the initial dollar sell-off, as it rose high as $1.2014 on Tuesday, its highest since May 2018.

The common currency later reversed those gains to sit at $1.19085.

“After hitting the 1.2 level, the euro fell due to the crowded long posing,” said Makoto Noji, chief FX strategist at SMBC Nikko.

“For a while, the market talked about how the Fed’s new policy weakened the dollar, but the flow of traders buying back the dollar will probably become strong for a week or two,” he said.

Against the Japanese yen, the dollar was little changed at 106.07 yen.

Japan’s Liberal Diplomatic Party formally decided to hold election of September 14, sources told Reuters, but analysts say the market has already priced in the risk.

“The sell-off that followed after (Shinzo Abe’s) surprise resignation announcement is over, and with the market assuming (Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide) Suga will win the election, there isn’t much factors left to consider,” said Mitsuo Imaizumi, chief FX strategist at Daiwa Securities.

Also supporting a rebound in the greenback, White House chief of staff Mark Meadows said Senate Republicans are likely to bring up a targeted Covid-19 relief bill next week.

However, U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said in a statement after a phone call with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Tuesday that “serious differences” remain between Democrats and the White House over coronavirus relief legislation.

Among antipodean currencies, the New Zealand dollar added 0.3% at $0.6780 after the Reserve bank of New Zealand governor Adrian Orr said the central bank’s actions have been effective in broadly lowering interest rates.

Elsewhere in the market, Sterling traded at 1.33, just below last year’s high that followed the 2019 election of 1.3516.

The Chinese yuan advanced 0.15% to 6.83.

Dollar buoyed by upbeat U.S. economic data; Aussie falls

The dollar bounced off two-year lows on Wednesday as U.S. data pointed to a firm manufacturing activity, while the euro retreated from its highest levels since 2018 on profit-taking.

Economic data published on Tuesday showed U.S. manufacturing activity accelerated to a nearly two-year high in August amid a surge in new orders, with the reading from the Institute for Supply Management at its highest level since November 2018.

The U.S. data followed similarly upbeat Chinese and European manufacturing indicators.

Analysts said that an increase in pent-up demand has contributed to the rise in the greenback.

“In hindsight, it was a strong data,” said Rikiya Takebe, senior strategist at Okasan Online Securities.

“But when you look closely into the eighteen industries, not all of them registered growth in employment… there wasn’t an improvement in employment overall,” he said.

The dollar index inched up 0.16% at 92.390, having hit its lowest since April 2018 of 91.737.

Separate data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics showed Australia suffered its worst economic fall in quarterly domestic product on record last quarter as the coronavirus pushed the country into recession.

Following the data announcement, the Australian dollar fell 0.5% to $0.7348 before retracing some losses at $0.73560.

The greenback has been declining since last week, down about 1%, after the Federal Reserve announced it would focus more on average inflation and higher employment. With the Fed’s shift in policy having leeway to keep U.S. interest rates lower for longer, it has encouraged traders to sell the currency.

That view was reinforced on Tuesday as Fed Governor Lael Brainard said the central bank would need to roll out more stimulus to help the economy overcome the coronavirus and fulfill the Fed’s new pledge.

U.S. Treasury yields fell following the speech as additional stimulus would likely involve more aggressive bond-buying.

The euro benefited from the initial dollar sell-off, as it rose high as $1.2014 on Tuesday, its highest since May 2018.

The common currency later reversed those gains to sit at $1.19085.

“After hitting the 1.2 level, the euro fell due to the crowded long posing,” said Makoto Noji, chief FX strategist at SMBC Nikko.

“For a while, the market talked about how the Fed’s new policy weakened the dollar, but the flow of traders buying back the dollar will probably become strong for a week or two,” he said.

Against the Japanese yen, the dollar was little changed at 106.075 yen.

Japan’s Liberal Diplomatic Party formally decided to hold election of September 14, sources told Reuters, but analysts say the market has already priced in the risk.

“The sell-off that followed after (Shinzo Abe’s) surprise resignation announcement is over, and with the market assuming (Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide) Suga will win the election, there isn’t much factors left to consider,” said Mitsuo Imaizumi, chief FX strategist at Daiwa Securities.

Also supporting a rebound in the greenback, White House chief of staff Mark Meadows said Senate Republicans are likely to bring up a targeted Covid-19 relief bill next week.

However, U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said in a statement after a phone call with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Tuesday that “serious differences” remain between Democrats and the White House over coronavirus relief legislation.

Among antipodean currencies, the New Zealand dollar added 0.3% at $0.6780 after the Reserve bank of New Zealand governor Adrian Orr said the central bank’s actions have been effective in broadly lowering interest rates.

Elsewhere in the market, Sterling traded at 1.3379, just below last year’s high that followed the 2019 election of 1.3516.

The Chinese yuan was little changed, last down 0.08% in offshore markets to 6.8305.