At 05:00 ET (09:00 GMT), the Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six other currencies, traded 0.1% higher at 105.365, not far removed from last week’s one-month top of 105.80.
The U.S. currency has been in demand even with data pointing to a slowing economy.
The latest numbers on the housing and labor markets were soft, and the upcoming PMI data, due later in the session, are expected to show a slowing in activity.
However, Fed officials continue to call for caution and more data before agreeing to cut interest rates, and the last meeting of the U.S. central bank saw the forecast of rate reductions this year cut to one from three previously.
By contrast, the European Central Bank started cutting interest rates earlier this month, the Swiss National Bank has reduced rates twice, and the Bank of England looks poised to start trimming rates in August.
“The surprise rate cut by the Swiss National Bank and a dovish hold by the Bank of England reinforced the notion that central banks in Europe are way ahead of the Federal Reserve with rate cuts, a dollar-positive development,” said analysts at ING, in a note.
GBP/USD fell 0.1% to 1.2652, with sterling close to a five-week low in the wake of the Bank of England’s latest policy meeting.
The BoE kept rates on hold, but some policy makers said the decision not to cut was “finely balanced”, raising expectations that policymakers will agree to a cut when they next meet at the start of August.
The pound has been supported to a certain degree Friday by data showing British retail sales jumped sharply last month after heavy rain kept shoppers away in April. Sales volumes rose 2.9% in May, up from a revised 1.8% fall in April.
EUR/USD fell 0.1% to 1.0692, after falling around 0.4% during the previous session with weak economic data added to the region’s political worries.
Eurozone business growth slowed sharply this month, with the bloc’s services industry showing some signs of weakening while the downturn in manufacturing took a turn for the worse.
The region’s preliminary composite Purchasing Managers’ Index, compiled by S&P Global, sank to 50.8 this month from May’s 52.2, confounding expectations in a Reuters poll for a rise to 52.5.
“With dovish signals from the European Central Bank’s major European counterparts (the BoE and SNB) and investors’ nerves still quite jittery on EU fiscal and political developments, the euro is understandably under some pressure in the latter half of this week,” ING added.
In Asia, USD/JPY traded 0.1% lower to 158.81, with the pair slipping a little after earlier climbing to a fresh eight-week high above 159.
The Japanese currency has remained on the back foot after the Bank of Japan’s decision last week to hold off on reducing bond buying stimulus until its July meeting.
The U.S. Treasury on Thursday added Japan to a list of countries it is monitoring for potential labelling as a currency manipulator, in the wake of the BOJ intervening heavily to support the yen as it sank to a 34-year low.
USD/CNY traded edged higher at 7.2611, with the Chinese yuan remaining under pressure amid doubts about the strength of the country’s economic recovery.
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