The dollar continues rallying. What about other currencies?

The US Dollar Regains Some Ground

The dollar rose against the euro and the yen on Monday as investors remained focused on the Federal Reserve’s interest rate hike path after a policymaker said last week’s lower US inflation data was being overstated. Wage growth in the eurozone may be picking up. However, longer-term inflation expectations remain anchored around the European Central Bank’s 2% target.

The dollar index rose less than expected in October. It fueled speculation that the Fed would scale back its aggressive interest rate hikes.

After reaching a three-month high during Asian trading hours, the euro fell 0.24% against the dollar to $1.0322. According to data released Monday, eurozone industrial production rose much more in September. Economists speculated, however, that this could be due to manufacturers pre-loading production in anticipation of energy-related disruptions this winter.

Sterling dropped ahead of British Chancellor Jeremy Gaunt’s autumn statement on Thursday. He should announce tax increases and spending cuts. The pound was down 0.77% at $1.11738 after rising 4% in the previous two sessions, reaching its highest since late August on Friday.

The dollar index rose 0.741% to 107.0712, comparing the US dollar to a basket of six other significant currencies like the euro, yen, and sterling.

The crypto exchange token was up 4.79% on the day at $1.49 but down 94% month to date.

Bitcoin had dropped to $15,784 earlier in the day before recovering slightly to trade up 1.82% at $16,607.

In response to the central bank’s largest official guidance fixing increase since 2005, when Beijing ended the yuan’s ten-year peg to the dollar, the onshore Chinese currency increased to almost two-month highs against the US dollar.

Categories: Forex