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Dollar Down On Simmering U.S.-China Tensions

Published 05/14/2020, 11:28 PM
Updated 05/14/2020, 11:32 PM
© Reuters.

By Gina Lee

Investing.com – The dollar was down on Friday morning in Asia, ending the week by giving up some of its gains from Thursday.

Investors are keeping an eye on simmering U.S.-China tensions, with U.S. President Donald Trump saying in an interview overnight that he did not want to speak with Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping and suggesting that he could cut ties with the second largest economy.

“The market is sort of in a wait-and-see mode at the moment, waiting to see in particular whether U.S.-China trade tensions really do escalate,” Rodrigo Catril, senior foreign exchange analyst at National Australia Bank (OTC:NABZY), told CNBC.

“Trump is making a lot of vocal discontent, but the reality is that if he goes into any meaningful punishment, he knows it’s going to have market consequences and given the brittle state of the U.S. economy, that’s a tricky balancing act.”

The U.S. Dollar Index that tracks the greenback against a basket of other currencies slipped 0.19% to 100.312 by 2:20 AM ET (7:20 AM GMT).

The USD/JPY pair was down 0.02% to 107.22 with Japan lifting the state of emergency in 39 of the country’s 47 prefectures on Thursday. But the state of emergency was not lifted for Tokyo and Osaka.

The USD/CNY pair gained 0.11% to 7.1013after China reported a 3.9% increase in April industrial production year-on-year. The increase was higher than the 1.5% figure predicted by analysts.

The country also reported a 7.5% fall in April retail sales from the same period last year. Analysts had predicted a 7% drop.

The AUD/USD pair dropped 0.10% to 0.6452, with the trade-sensitive Australian dollar reporting its first weekly loss since early April.

The NZD/USD pair slid 0.22% to 0.5988 from Thursday’s three-week low of $0.5958.

The GBP/USD pair was down 0.18% to 1.2204as the pound touched a five-week low of $1.2161 on ThursdayThe U.K. reiterated its refusal to extend the Brexit transition deadline beyond December. 

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Latest comments

is this a joke? all the figures are from months before!
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