Khaleej Times

Trump’s latest failure hits dollar’s health...

- Patrick Graham Reuters

london — The US dollar sank to a 10-month low against a basket of major currencies on Tuesday, hit by the latest collapse of President Donald Trump’s efforts to deliver a new healthcare bill in a market deeply worried by the pace of US growth.

The Australian dollar was by far the biggest beneficiar­y of another slide for the greenback, jumping 1.5 per cent to more than two-year highs after minutes from the Reserve Bank’s last policy meeting showed it turning more upbeat on the economy.

In four weeks dominated by expectatio­ns that by doubts over the Federal Reserve’s ability to raise interest rates further, and signs that other major central banks are finally turning more hawkish, the dollar is now down more than three per cent.

Since hitting a 14-year peak of 103.82 on January 3, at 94.830 on Tuesday, the dollar index was down 8.8 per cent.

“Clearly anything that comes along at the moment just corroborat­es the market’s negative attitude to the dollar,” said Neil Mellor, senior forex strategist with Bank of New York Mellon in London.

“There’s just not enough inflation at the moment. And anything like this [defeat for Trump] is liable to push it lower.”

Two more Republican Senators, Jerry Moran and Mike Lee, announced their opposition late on Monday to a revised Republican healthcare bill, leaving efforts to pass the legislatio­n in chaos.

“If the bills won’t pass, there will be no money for tax cuts. The implementa­tion of his fiscal policy will be difficult,” said Bart Wakabayash­i, Tokyo Branch Manager of State Street.

Friday’s weak reading on US inflation and retail sales also fanned speculatio­n that the Fed may not have justificat­ion for another rate hike by the end of this year, despite policymake­rs’ projection for such a move. Money market instrument­s price in less than 50 per cent chance of a rate increase for the rest of the year.

In contrast, central bank policymake­rs in the eurozone, the UK and Canada have recently signal led they could adjust their policies, with the Bank of Canada raising rates last week for the first time since 2010. “A lot of countries are catching up with the US in terms of tightening in monetary policy. So it is natural that the dollar is losing its advantage,” said Yuki Ishizuki, senior currency strategist at Damian Securities. The euro rose 0.3 per cent to $1.1517, hitting its highest levels since May last year.

The European Central Bank is expected to keep its policy on hold at its rates review on Thursday while many investors expect it to signal a reduction of its stimulus in the following policy meeting in September. —

 ?? Reuters ?? Since hitting a 14-year peak of on January 3, the dollar index is now down 8.8 per cent. —
Reuters Since hitting a 14-year peak of on January 3, the dollar index is now down 8.8 per cent. —

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