The Sun (Malaysia)

Dollar rises on expectatio­ns of pro-growth message from Trump

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LONDON: The dollar gained ground against the yen, euro and pound yesterday, as expectatio­ns of a pro-growth message from US President-elect Donald Trump’s first news conference prevailed over worries about what he will say on trade and China.

The dollar has gained broadly since Trump’s victory in November as investors bet he would boost public spending and spur repatriati­on of overseas funds by US companies, policies expected to bring higher inflation and interest rates.

But more doubts have emerged in recent weeks about that narrative, and investors will have a close eye on what the new president says about labelling China a currency manipulato­r and free trade more generally.

“The surprise would be if he talks about his concerns about dollar strength,” said Simon Derrick, head of research at Bank of New York Mellon here.

“He has made comments suggesting he is uncomforta­ble with a strong dollar, but the market has largely ignored them.”

The dollar index rose 0.3% to ¥102.37, at the top end of a range it has held for the past week and off a 14year peak of ¥103.82 hit on Jan 3. Against the yen, it gained almost half per cent to ¥116.28, still 2% off almost one-year highs hit in December.

The euro was also down 0.4% at US$1.0515 after brushing a 10-day high of US$1.0628 overnight.

Trump’s news conference – his first since the election – was due to start at midnight Malaysian time.

“The dollar is still holding up quite well and there is a presumptio­n that we are going to get support from tighter monetary policy and looser fiscal policy,” said Jeremy Stretch, head of currency strategy at CIBC here.

“Overall we’re still constructi­ve but it does look more a case of playing the end of the rally before we see a correction later this year.”

The morning’s other big mover in Europe was sterling, hit by a worsethan-expected trade deficit after a week of political news which added to fears Britain is heading for a “hard Brexit”. The pound fell by as much as 0.6% to trade below US$1.21 for the first time since late October, before steadying at US$1.2112.– Reuters

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