Kuwait Times

Dollar struggles near 6-1/2 month low

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The dollar struggled to recover ground against other major currencies yesterday as stronger German data and low 10-year US Treasury yields offset signs investors were ready to take some profit on its worst week of losses in a year.

Moves on major markets were tight, with the common denominato­r still a weaker greenback, down 0.1 percent against the yen, and as much as 0.7 percent against a resurgent New Zealand dollar.

But despite another strong batch of numbers from flash European purchasing manager surveys and a rise in German business morale to an all-time high, the euro was slightly lower in midday trading in Europe. “US political risk obviously has come very much to the front of market attention in the past week,” said Lee Hardman, a currency economist with Japan’s MUFG in London.

“But from here, to us most of the correction on the dollar has already happened. For it to extend much further we need to see further disappoint­ing data from the United States.” By 1155 GMT, the dollar index had recovered to stand roughly flat on the day at 96.972, off a 6-1/2 month low of 96.797 hit mid-session on Monday. It traded at 111.17 yen and $1.1216 per euro, having traded at $1.1268 - its weakest since Donald Trump’s election as US president last November. The euro was strengthen­ed on Monday by comments from German leader Angela Merkel, who said a euro that was “too weak” was the cause of Germany’s massive trade surplus.

Berlin is likely to hear more grumbling, particular­ly from a Washington administra­tion that has made noises about the dollar’s strength, at a meeting of Group of Seven leaders in Italy this weekend.

But it is a fall in US data and growing concern over a White House that has failed so far to deliver on grand promises on border taxes, spending and capital repatriati­on that have dominated the past two weeks. The dollar is now down around 7 percent for this year, handing back all of its gains after Trump’s election last year. — Reuters

 ??  ?? TOKYO: A man looks at an electronic stock board showing Japan’s Nikkei 225 index at a securities firm yesterday in Tokyo. — AP
TOKYO: A man looks at an electronic stock board showing Japan’s Nikkei 225 index at a securities firm yesterday in Tokyo. — AP

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