Dollar on course for monthly gain; sterling hands back some trade deal gains
2023.02.28 06:22
© Reuters.
Investing.com – The U.S. dollar traded higher in Europe Tuesday, on track to post strong gains this month, while sterling gave back some of its gains from the previous session after the U.K. signed a new post-Brexit trade deal with the European Union.
At 03:05 ET (08:05 GMT), the , which tracks the greenback against a basket of six other currencies, traded 0.1% higher at 104.740 and is on course for a monthly gain of around 3%, its first since September.
The dollar has been on a tear this month as stronger-than-expected economic data, including hot inflation numbers, pointed to the U.S. raising interest rates further and keeping them high for longer than previously envisaged.
“We have learned that U.S. inflation is proving much stickier and U.S. activity firmer than we were led to believe in December and January,” said analysts at ING, in a note. “Understandably, investors are now taking the Federal Reserve hawks more seriously and have priced three more 25bp rate hikes from the Fed in March, May, and June.”
Data on from December is due out later Tuesday, as is reading on . Later this week, investors will get the latest reading on and activity.
Elsewhere, fell 0.1% to 1.2045, handing back some of the previous session’s around 1% gains after the U.K. and the European Union announced a new deal for post-Brexit trading arrangements for Northern Ireland.
This agreement, if it gets through a deeply divided U.K. parliament, looks set to secure improved relations with Brussels, not to mention the United States, and should make trade smoother for businesses by easing rules.
fell 0.1% to 1.0601, having also risen 0.6% in the previous session, after rose 0.9% on the month in February, an of 6.2%.
This was more than the expected 0.7% and 6.1%, respectively, and raised the prospect that the overall might come in more than the expected 8.2% in February.
European Central Bank Chief Economist said earlier Tuesday that Eurozone inflation pressures have begun to ease, but added that the central bank will not end rate hikes until it is confident price growth is heading back towards 2%.
These figures suggest that its rate hikes may continue for some time to come.
traded 0.4% higher to 136.75, after data showed Japan’s fell 4.6% in January from a month earlier, the fastest decrease since May 2022.
fell 0.3% to 0.6712, dropped 0.4% to 0.6142, while edged lower to 6.9434, ahead of Wednesday’s release of China’s for February.
This is expected to show that business activity in China’s important manufacturing sector improved from the prior month, but remained close to contraction territory.