Dollar Struggles as Big Rate Hike Bets Cool

Dollar Struggles as Big Rate Hike Bets Cool
U.S. dollar banknotes are displayed in this illustration taken on Feb 14, 2022. Dado Ruvic/Reuters
Reuters
Updated:

LONDON—The U.S. dollar struggled versus its major rivals on Monday as traders reassessed the prospects of aggressive rate hikes, while the euro led gainers at the start of the European Central Bank’s annual summit in Portugal.

Aggressive interest rate hike bets have boosted the dollar in recent days with an index rising to a near two-decade high of 105.79 earlier this month. But with some high-frequency data indicators showing growth momentum starting to cool, investors are turning bearish on the economy’s prospects.

“The sharp rise in inflation expectations has resulted in consumer confidence falling to a record low which will reinforce fears over a sharper slowdown in the U.S. economy going forward,” Mizuho strategists said in a note.

Against its rivals, the dollar edged 0.2 percent lower at 103.86. It hit a late 2002 high of 105.79 earlier this month.

Higher terminal pricing of benchmark interest rates has been a key support for the dollar but that source of strength has faded in recent days.

Futures pricing shows traders now anticipating the U.S. Federal Reserve’s benchmark funds rate stabilizing around 3.5 percent from March next year, a pullback from pricing in rates zooming to around 4 percent in 2023.

The euro led gainers versus the dollar as the European Central Bank’s annual forum in Sintra got underway with ECB President Christine Lagarde and Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell both attending the meeting. Markets will be keenly watching for any signs of future policy moves.

The single currency was up 0.2 percent at $1.0580.

Notwithstanding the upbeat sentiment in global markets, commodity currencies came under pressure on Monday as data showed profits at China’s industrial firms shrank again, albeit at a slower pace, in May after a sharp fall in April.

Cryptocurrencies solidified gains, with the world’s biggest cryptocurrency Bitcoin up 1.4 percent, trading at $21,170.88 after falling as low as $17,588.88 earlier this month.

By Saikat Chatterjee