At 04:20 ET (09:20 GMT), the Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six other currencies, traded 0.1% lower at 102.997, handing back some of the almost 2% gains it has seen since the start of this year.
The greenback has drifted lower Tuesday, but remained close to one-month highs as traders price in a greater chance that the central bank will keep rates steady in March, a marked reversal from earlier expectations for a cut.
The Fed is widely expected to keep rates on hold when it meets next week, and ahead of this investors will have some key U.S. economic readings to digest.
Fourth-quarter GDP data, on Thursday, is expected to show some cooling in growth, while PCE price index data, the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, is likely on Friday to reiterate that inflation remained sticky in December.
In Asia, USD/JPY fell 0.5% to 147.39, after the Bank of Japan maintained its ultra-low interest rates and stuck to its ultra-dovish policies, as widely expected.
The central bank also forecast lower inflation in fiscal 2024, providing less impetus to immediately begin tightening its ultra-loose policy.
However, BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda indicated in his post-decision comments that the time for tightening policy was drawing nearer.
“Our core-core inflation forecast is at 1.9%, very close to our 2% target,” he said. This was the case in October but it happened again this time, after close scrutiny. This is the biggest factor that made us more convinced than before that the likelihood (of sustainably achieving our price target) is gradually heightening.”
USD/CNY traded 0.3% lower to 7.1712, with the yuan helped by recent reports that the People’s Bank of China was selling dollars in open markets to support the Chinese currency.
In Europe, EUR/USD traded 0.1% higher at 1.0886, ahead of the European Central Bank’s policy-setting meeting on Thursday.
The ECB is certain to keep rates steady, and thus investors will focus on the tone of the policy statement and President Christine Lagarde‘s press conference.
“We don’t expect this meeting to be a turning point for eurozone rates or for the euro,” said analysts at ING, in a note.
“We are, indeed, in a phase of data dependency. Expect President Lagarde to reiterate it.”
GBP/USD traded 0.2% higher at 1.2724, with sterling helped by the release of data showing U.K. public sector borrowing fell to £7.8 billion last month, around half the sum borrowed a year earlier and the lowest figure for a December since 2019.
This will be a boost to Chancellor Jeremy Hunt as he prepares to unveil the Budget in March as a general election looms.
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