The dollar surged to a three-week high in Asian trade, extending a strong rebound from Thursday as the SNB rate cut saw traders largely look past signals on interest rate cuts from the Federal Reserve.
The dollar index and dollar index futures rose 0.8% and 0.2%, respectively in Asian trade on Thursday. Outsized gains in the dollar index signaled more immediate demand for the greenback.
Both dollar indicators surged on Thursday after the SNB unexpectedly cut interest rates, becoming the first major central bank to do so after an extended hiking cycle in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.
This left the dollar as the only low-risk, high-yielding currency in the interim. The greenback also benefited from a dovish outlook from the Bank of England on Thursday, which saw traders dump the pound in favor of the dollar.
A positive outlook for the U.S. economy also favored flows into the dollar. The Fed sharply upgraded its outlook for growth in 2024.
While the central bank is still expected to begin cutting interest rates by June, its relative hawkishness, in comparison to other central banks, is expected to benefit the dollar.
The Chinese yuan was among the worst hit by a stronger dollar, with the possibility of more interest rate cuts by the People’s Bank of China also adding to pressure.
The USDCNY pair shot up 0.4% on Friday, crossing the 7.2 level for the first time since November 2023. Reports said that the PBOC was selling dollars and buying yuan from the open market to support the Chinese currency.
Losses in the yuan came as top PBOC officials signaled that they still had more headroom to cut the bank’s reserve requirement ratio, which will unlock more liquidity in the economy. But such a move bodes poorly for the yuan.
The Japanese yen was flat on Friday, but was nursing steep overnight losses as the USDJPY pair reversed most declines made after the Bank of Japan hiked interest rates this week.
USDJPY hovered around 151.56- close to its highest level in four months.
But further weakness in the yen was stalled by strong consumer price index data for February, which lent further credence to the BOJ’s recent policy pivot.
Broader Asian currencies fell on Friday. The Australian dollar’s AUDUSD pair slid 0.6%, while the South Korean won’s USDKRW pair surged 0.4%.
The Singapore dollar’s USDSGD pair rise 0.3%, while the Indian rupee’s USDINR pair moved further above 83 and closer to record-high territory.
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