Breaking News
Investing Pro 0
Free Webinar - Webinar: Simplify Options Trading | Thursday, September 28, 2023 | 08:00PM EDT Enroll Now

Dollar rebounds after CPI losses; debt ceiling uncertainty offers support

Published May 11, 2023 03:06AM ET Updated May 11, 2023 03:25AM ET
Saved. See Saved Items.
This article has already been saved in your Saved Items
 
© Reuters.
 
EUR/USD
+0.02%
Add to/Remove from Watchlist
Add to Watchlist
Add Position

Position added successfully to:

Please name your holdings portfolio
 
GBP/USD
+0.05%
Add to/Remove from Watchlist
Add to Watchlist
Add Position

Position added successfully to:

Please name your holdings portfolio
 
USD/JPY
+0.06%
Add to/Remove from Watchlist
Add to Watchlist
Add Position

Position added successfully to:

Please name your holdings portfolio
 
AUD/USD
+0.03%
Add to/Remove from Watchlist
Add to Watchlist
Add Position

Position added successfully to:

Please name your holdings portfolio
 
USD/CNY
0.01%
Add to/Remove from Watchlist
Add to Watchlist
Add Position

Position added successfully to:

Please name your holdings portfolio
 
DXY
-0.05%
Add to/Remove from Watchlist
Add to Watchlist
Add Position

Position added successfully to:

Please name your holdings portfolio
 

Investing.com - The U.S. dollar edged higher in early European trade Thursday, recovering after overnight losses, while sterling remained near recent highs ahead of the Bank of England’s latest policy-setting meeting.

At 03:05 ET (07:05 GMT), the Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six other currencies, traded 0.4% higher at 101.640, after dropping around 0.3% the previous session.

Data released Wednesday showed U.S. consumer inflation eased slightly in April, pointing towards a pause in the Federal Reserve’s aggressive monetary tightening cycle.

However, dollar losses were limited as uncertainty over the U.S. debt ceiling remained, with U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen on Thursday warning about the potential global economic damage a default would trigger.

“The current situation is inevitably weighing on risk sentiment and offering support to the dollar,” said analysts at ING, in a note. “There is now growing concern that it might actually take a market sell-off (in the equity or money markets) to break the impasse.”

Elsewhere, GBP/USD fell 0.3% to 1.2588, falling back from Wednesday's one-year high of 1.2679 with the Bank of England set to announce its 12th straight rate hike at its policy meeting later in the session as it tackles headline inflation in double figures, the highest inflation of any big advanced economy.

“Hawkish inflation and wage data last month point to another 25 basis-point rate Bank of England rate hike,” ING added. “But the Bank's recent emphasis on the lagged impact of past tightening suggests the bar for subsequent moves remains high.” 

EUR/USD fell 0.3% to 1.0946, moving back to the middle of its trading range over the past month after recent gains on the back of last week’s increase of borrowing costs.

French ECB policymaker Francois Villeroy de Galhau said on Wednesday that further rate hikes would be "more marginal", adding “it is the future impact of these past rate hikes that should for the most part allow us to reach our objective within two years."

USD/JPY rose 0.1% to 134.51, after the yen posted strong gains in overnight trade after U.S. yields slumped in the wake of the U.S. consumer inflation data.

AUD/USD fell 0.5% to 0.6744, while USD/CNY rose 0.1% to 6.9376, with the yuan falling to a two-month low after weak Chinese inflation data suggested a tepid economic recovery.

Dollar rebounds after CPI losses; debt ceiling uncertainty offers support
 

Related Articles

Add a Comment

Comment Guidelines

We encourage you to use comments to engage with other users, share your perspective and ask questions of authors and each other. However, in order to maintain the high level of discourse we’ve all come to value and expect, please keep the following criteria in mind:  

  •            Enrich the conversation, don’t trash it.

  •           Stay focused and on track. Only post material that’s relevant to the topic being discussed. 

  •           Be respectful. Even negative opinions can be framed positively and diplomatically. Avoid profanity, slander or personal attacks directed at an author or another user. Racism, sexism and other forms of discrimination will not be tolerated.

  • Use standard writing style. Include punctuation and upper and lower cases. Comments that are written in all caps and contain excessive use of symbols will be removed.
  • NOTE: Spam and/or promotional messages and comments containing links will be removed. Phone numbers, email addresses, links to personal or business websites, Skype/Telegram/WhatsApp etc. addresses (including links to groups) will also be removed; self-promotional material or business-related solicitations or PR (ie, contact me for signals/advice etc.), and/or any other comment that contains personal contact specifcs or advertising will be removed as well. In addition, any of the above-mentioned violations may result in suspension of your account.
  • Doxxing. We do not allow any sharing of private or personal contact or other information about any individual or organization. This will result in immediate suspension of the commentor and his or her account.
  • Don’t monopolize the conversation. We appreciate passion and conviction, but we also strongly believe in giving everyone a chance to air their point of view. Therefore, in addition to civil interaction, we expect commenters to offer their opinions succinctly and thoughtfully, but not so repeatedly that others are annoyed or offended. If we receive complaints about individuals who take over a thread or forum, we reserve the right to ban them from the site, without recourse.
  • Only English comments will be allowed.
  • Any comment you publish, together with your investing.com profile, will be public on investing.com and may be indexed and available through third party search engines, such as Google.

Perpetrators of spam or abuse will be deleted from the site and prohibited from future registration at Investing.com’s discretion.

Write your thoughts here
 
Are you sure you want to delete this chart?
 
Post
Post also to:
 
Replace the attached chart with a new chart ?
1000
Your ability to comment is currently suspended due to negative user reports. Your status will be reviewed by our moderators.
Please wait a minute before you try to comment again.
Thanks for your comment. Please note that all comments are pending until approved by our moderators. It may therefore take some time before it appears on our website.
Comments (2)
Ibrahim Oz
Ibrahim Oz May 11, 2023 6:58AM ET
Saved. See Saved Items.
This comment has already been saved in your Saved Items
So US is facing the risk of default unless the debt ceiling got increased and the article says this support US Dollar.. :)) This is laughable..
Jonathan Sim
Jonathan Sim May 11, 2023 6:58AM ET
Saved. See Saved Items.
This comment has already been saved in your Saved Items
in any crisis, people would sell their investments (equity, bond) in exchange for cash........ thus. the support. U r the one laughhhhhable
Jouni Trading
Jouni May 11, 2023 4:11AM ET
Saved. See Saved Items.
This comment has already been saved in your Saved Items
Inflation didn't slow down in April, only yoy. Monthly Core and headline inflation went up in April.
taylor jason
taylor jason May 11, 2023 4:11AM ET
Saved. See Saved Items.
This comment has already been saved in your Saved Items
yup. wage inflation also came in at .4% last month too.
 
Are you sure you want to delete this chart?
 
Post
 
Replace the attached chart with a new chart ?
1000
Your ability to comment is currently suspended due to negative user reports. Your status will be reviewed by our moderators.
Please wait a minute before you try to comment again.
Add Chart to Comment
Confirm Block

Are you sure you want to block %USER_NAME%?

By doing so, you and %USER_NAME% will not be able to see any of each other's Investing.com's posts.

%USER_NAME% was successfully added to your Block List

Since you’ve just unblocked this person, you must wait 48 hours before renewing the block.

Report this comment

I feel that this comment is:

Comment flagged

Thank You!

Your report has been sent to our moderators for review
Continue with Google
or
Sign up with Email