The dollar stays strong as the Fed leads a big week for central banks
LONDON The dollar remained steady near its two-decade highs against the other important currencies Monday morning, attempting to bide its time before several central bank meetings , including one hosted by the U.S. Federal Reserve that is expected to announce another significant rate increase.
Trade was generally light market activity was generally low, with London and Tokyo shut for public holidays.
The world’s stock market were tense and the dollar held its solid tone, in light of the expectation that the Fed will keep its aggressive rate-hike policy to limit the uncomfortably high rate of inflation.
Related: The dollar goes up a little bit, and the Federal Reserve rules Central Bank Week.
The dollar index that measures the currency’s value against six other currencies it was in the ascendancy of 0.4 percent to 110.06 It was back toward an all-time high of 110.79 which was reached on Sept. 7.
“A while back there was talk that the Fed was close to being done with rate hikes, but that was premature,” said Nordea chief analyst Jan von Gerich. “The Fed is not close to being done and that is supportive for the dollar.”
The data released last week indicated an increase in the underlying U.S. consumer price rises market participants have been pondering an eventual 100 basis point rate hike after the Fed closes their two-day session on Wednesday. Markets are fully pricing in a 75 basis-point Fed rate increase this week, and a approximately 20% chance of a 100-bps hike.
This week also comes by holidays that could swell liquidity and lead to sharper price swings as well. There are holidays in Japan and Britain on Monday, Japan and Britain not working for the week of Monday. Australia in the week of Thursday. Japan also on Friday and many more.
Euro was 0.25 percent lower at $0.9993 and sterling was 0.4 percent weaker at $1.1378 and was within reach of the lows of 37 years on Friday, while both the New Zealand as well as Australian dollars fell by more than 0.5 percent each.
The dollar of Canada fell to its lowest in nearly two years, at 1.3324 for a U.S. dollars.
The dollar was 0.4 percent more firmer at 143.46 Yuan, which was hovering just under the strong resistance level of the 145 mark, which was boosted through Japanese policymakers’ resolute talks regarding currency manipulation.
It is expected that the BoJ is widely anticipated to keep its huge stimulus during its gathering on Thursday and Wednesday while maintaining its ultra-loose policy. However, a shift in Japanese the monetary policy could happen sooner than previously expected, as the central bank having recently dropped the term “temporary” for its description of a rise in inflation.
“We doubt that the yen weakness thus far will be considered concerning enough to force a change in the BoJ’s reluctance to kick off normalization any time soon,” UniCredit analysts stated in an email.
Related: The weak dollar and supply worries cause oil prices to go up.
The Chinese yuan closed at a new 26-month low on Monday , and was trading below the psychologically crucial 7-per-dollar threshold. In trade with offshore traders the yuan was 0.35 lower.
Bitcoin is the most valuable cryptocurrency according to market value, dropped to a low of three months below $19,000 as worries about the rising interest rates in the world shook risky assets.