Dollar scales two-month peak as Fed hike bets ramp up

  • Summary
SINGAPORE, June 8 (Reuters) – The dollar was perched near a ​two-month high on Monday after a blowout U.S. jobs report sent traders ramping up bets on a Federal Reserve ‌rate hike this year, while the yen teetered further into the intervention zone.
Moves in currencies were largely muted compared to the broader market, where a rout in technology stocks swept across Asia. The dollar held to its strong gains made in the wake of the report that showed nonfarm payrolls increased by 172,000 ​jobs last month, far exceeding estimates.
Against the dollar, the euro fell to a two-month low of $1.1507, while sterling struggled at ​a three-week trough of $1.33165.
The Australian and New Zealand dollars similarly slid to their lowest in two months ⁠at $0.7016 and $0.5779, respectively.
“The U.S. payrolls report … paints a picture of a U.S. labour market that is strengthening despite the ongoing energy ​price shock,” said Jonas Goltermann, chief markets economist at Capital Economics.
“That combination makes policy tightening by the Fed later this year increasingly probable … ​we now expect the FOMC to deliver two 25-basis-point rate hikes later this year, in response to the energy supply shock and the re-acceleration of the U.S. labour market.”
Prior to the release of the jobs report, traders had been gradually adding to bets on a Fed hike this year, as the ​global energy crisis tied to the Iran war threatens to stoke inflation.
Israel said it struck military targets in western and central Iran on ​Monday, even after U.S. President Donald Trump reportedly told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to refrain from further attacks.
Markets are now pricing in a ‌more than ⁠70% chance that the Fed will raise rates in December, sharply up from a 45% probability a week ago, according to the CME FedWatch tool.

YEN ON TENTERHOOKS

The strength in the dollar has in turn brought more pain for the yen, which fetched 160.33 per dollar .
The Japanese currency has now erased its gains made in the wake of Tokyo’s 11.7 trillion yen ($73.01 billion) intervention just over a month ago, when it ​slid to its lowest since ​July 2024 at 160.725.
Sources told ⁠Reuters that the BOJ is expected to raise interest rates this month unless a sharp escalation in the Middle East conflict upends markets, as rising fuel costs from the energy shock compound price pressures ​in the economy.
“I think that leaves us in limbo for the yen, given that the hike ​is pretty much priced ⁠in,” said Sim Moh Siong, a strategist at OCBC.
“In order for the yen to benefit further from rate-hike expectations, the market will be looking at whether the BOJ is going to telegraph a faster-than-expected pace of rate hikes.”
In cryptocurrencies, bitcoin was up more than 1% to $62,615.25, rebounding ⁠after ​sliding to its lowest since October 2024 last week.
Ether similarly rose over 1% to $1,652.23, having ​also slid to a 14-month low last week.
Booming AI stocks and a series of glittering upcoming new listings such as SpaceX have lured capital away from bitcoin, leaving ​the world’s largest cryptocurrency struggling since the start of the year.
($1 = 160.2500 yen)

Read more Gold extends losses on US interest rate-hike fears

Read more Tumbling tech darlings slam brakes on AI rally

Read more Oil prices climb more than $3 after Israeli strikes on Lebanon

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *