Dollar hits one-month high as traders eye Fed rates liftoff
The dollar hit its highest in a month on Thursday and pressed the euro towards major support levels, after the Federal Reserve set the stage for rate hikes next year -- far sooner than its developed market peers are expected to move.
The U.S. central bank left policy settings unchanged overnight and, as expected, did not announce the beginning of asset purchase tapering. But the Federal Reserve said "a moderation in the pace of asset purchases may soon be warranted" and Fed Chair Jerome Powell said board members believed tapering could conclude around mid-2022, opening the way for rate hikes after that.
The dollar rose broadly after his comments, especially against the euro and yen. The U.S. yield curve flattened and Fed funds futures markets moved to price a 50% chance of a hike in October and to fully price a 25 basis point rate hike in December.
At a one-month low of $1.1684 in early Asia trade, the euro is close to its 2021 trough of $1.1664 and not far from major support at $1.1602, a break of which could open the way to falls as far as $1.14.
Liquidity was lightened by a holiday in Japan on Thursday.
The yen also lost ground after Powell's news conference and ended up falling 0.5% for the session - its sharpest drop in more than three months - taking it to 109.87 per dollar, about the middle of a range it has kept since March.
The dollar index hit a one-month high of 93.526.
The Australian and New Zealand dollars gave up gains after Powell's remarks and traded slightly lower in Asia, with the Aussie last down 0.1% at $0.7323, while the kiwi dipped below $0.70 to $0.6992.
The Bank of England meets on Thursday, with traders expecting it to keep rates steady but wary of any hawkish surprises. read more
Sterling is hovering just above big chart support at $1.3615.