Forex
The
dollar trod water on Friday as traders awaited a closely watched monthly U.S.
labor market report that should provide clues as to whether the world's biggest
economy will bounce back after a lackluster second quarter.
The greenback was flat on the week
against a basket of major currencies (DXY),
having fallen 2 percent last week - its worst showing since April - on a
much-weaker-than-expected set of U.S. growth data and on a statement from the
Federal Reserve that failed to give a clear signal of a near-term rate rise.
On Friday it inched down 0.1 percent to
95.676, having hit a five-week low of 95.003 at the start of the week.
Sterling edged up 0.2 percent to $1.3128 ,
finding a foothold after a 1.6 percent fall on Thursday after the Bank of
England surprised markets with a larger-than-expected monetary stimulus package.
The U.S non-farm payrolls report (NFP)
is due at 12.30 GMT, with economists polled by Reuters expecting 180,000 jobs
to have been added in July.
"Everyone's waiting for the
NFP – they have been all week," said Commerzbank (DE:CBKG) currency strategist Esther Reichelt, from
Frankfurt.
"It is particularly in focus
because of the weak GDP data last week, which led to a lot of disappointment
and also the repricing of rate expectations. Now everyone is waiting for some
signal of whether the U.S. economy is really in such a bad state, or whether
there is hope that Q3 is going to be better."
A strong NFP reading could help the
dollar by reviving expectations that the Fed could raise interest rates by
year-end - a scenario that had been discarded in the days that followed
Britain's shock vote to leave the European Union in June.
Elsewhere, the Australian dollar
rose 0.4 percent to a three-week high of $0.7663 . For the week,
the Aussie has gained 0.7 percent,
showing resilience even after the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) cut interest
rates to a record low 1.5 percent on Tuesday.
Recent firmness in iron ore prices
and a search for yield among investors have helped support the Australian
dollar, said Roy Teo, senior FX strategist for ABN AMRO (AS:ABNd) Bank in Singapore.
"But the higher the Australian
dollar goes, the risk of RBA cutting rates will increase," Teo said,
adding that such prospects could offer an opportunity to sell into the Aussie's
rally.
Against the yen, the dollar slipped 0.1
percent to 101.15 yen, not far from the greenback's three-week low of 100.68
yen set on Tuesday.
Source by Reuters
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