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Dollar Retreats as Congressional Bickering Over Stimulus Package Continues

Published 08/12/2020, 09:51 PM
Updated 08/12/2020, 10:00 PM
© Reuters.

By Gina Lee

Investing.com – The dollar was down on Thursday morning in Asia, reversing its gains from the day before over the U.S. Congress’ inability to reach a consensus for the country’s latest COVID-19 stimulus package.

U.S. President Donald Trump went so far as to accuse Democrats on Wednesday of not wanting to negotiate over the package, with Republican and Democratic negotiators trading barbs and blame as negotiations ended without a result for the fifth day.

COVID-19 continues to impact U.S. economic recovery, with almost 5.2 million cases in the U.S. alone as of August 13, according to Johns Hopkins University and millions unemployed.

Although investors have swung between optimism and pessimism over the stalled package, some argued that U.S. economic recovery depended on both sides reaching an agreement.

"The dollar needs positive news on stimulus to rise further, but I'm sure we'll get there, because these politicians can't go back to their constituencies empty handed," Masafumi Yamamoto, chief currency strategist at Mizuho Securities, told Reuters.

"Once this happens, gains in dollar/yen could be a catalyst for dollar gains against other currencies."

The U.S. Dollar Index that tracks the greenback against a basket of other currencies was down 0.18% to 93.237 by 9:52 PM ET (2:52 AM GMT).

The USD/JPY pair fell 0.17% to 106.70.

The AUD/USD pair was up 0.08% to 0.7167, with the Australian Bureau of Statistics releasing a positive jobs report for July earlier in the day. The report said that 114,700 jobs were added in July, beating analyst expectations of 40,000 jobs prepared by Investing.com. July’s unemployment rate of 7.5% also beat expectations.

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But the country’s fight against COVID-19 goes on, although the country was poised to report its lowest one-day rise in the number of cases in more than three weeks on Thursday.

The battle against the virus also continues across the Tasman sea, with New Zealand reporting 14 new cases on Thursday. The NZD/USD pair inched up 0.01% to 0.6578.

The USD/CNY pair was up 0.03% to 6.9383, with Chinese officials widely expected to bring up Trump’s ban of the TikTok and WeChat apps, due to be enforced in September, during an online meeting with U.S. officials on Saturday. The two sides will also discuss trade, as well as air other grievances, during the meeting.

The GBP/USD pair gained 0.24% to 1.3064.

Latest comments

Dollar needs stimulus to go higher? What? Masafumi Yamamoto, chief currency strategist at Mizuho Securities said, Mr Yamamoto has no idea what he is talking about, is he confused? Less stimulus the dollar rallies, no stimulus thd dollar rallies. More stimulus the dollar sells off. My son in 14 and he know this is how it works! Printing more dollars does not increase its value! This guy is a chief stratergist? SMH!!
We're in an upside down world. Contraction under normal circumstances increases value. Under current circumstances, delaying a stimulus package places imposes economic risk that would also pressure currency valuations.
yes, depends on time. In short term, dollar will be upside, but mid term downside as you said.
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