LONDON (Reuters) - The dollar was crawling toward its worst month since January 2018 on Monday as intermittent waves of Brexit optimism pushed the pound to a 5-1/2 month high and kept the euro’s bumper October intact.
Despite the failure of Britain’s “super-Saturday” to live up to its billing when UK lawmakers delayed a vote on a reworked Brexit deal, there seemed to be tentative hopes that it would eventually be passed.
Asia had dragged the pound 0.5% lower but it rebounded in Europe and briefly broke above $1.30 GBP=D3 for the first time in 5-1/2 months as the flow of headlines resumed.
A lawmaker from the Northern Irish Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), whose votes could be vital to the deal passing, said it would not support a possible opposition party amendment to put the UK in a customs union with the EU.
Some interpreted that as suggesting it could support the deal, although there were plenty of other hurdles to clear, including whether the British Parliament’s speaker would even allow another vote at this stage.
“I think markets are really trying to feel their way through this,” said Ned Rumpeltin, TD Securities’ European Head of Currency Strategy. “But what is clear is you don’t want to be caught short the pound at this point.”
The political maneuvering puts the timing of the whole process in question yet again, even though markets seem assured that it significantly reduces a ‘no deal’ Brexit, considered by many to be the worst-case scenario for the UK economy.
Goldman Sachs said it sees the chance of a no deal Brexit reduced to just 5%, from 10% previously.
Elsewhere, currency moves were limited, though the last few weeks has seen some sizeable shifts taking place.
The dollar is down 2.5% this month against a basket of top currencies which, if it stays that way would be its worst month since January last year. .DXY
It hovered at $1.1157 per euro on Monday but managed to claw up to 108.48 JPY= against the safe-haven Japanese yen. The yen has been weak too. Last week it hit a 2-1/2-month low.
The Bank of Japan meets next week and its Governor Haruhiko Kuroda told Reuters at the IMF meetings that it could “certainly” cut rates again if needed.
“If we need further easing of monetary conditions, we would certainly reduce short- to medium-term interest rates. But we don’t want to reduce super-long interest rates,” Kuroda said on Saturday.
CENTRAL FOCUS
There is plenty of central bank action in store this week too. Thursday will be Mario Draghi’s last meeting in charge at the European Central Bank and comes amid divergence over its recent decision to restart bond buying.
China’s yuan firmed on Monday after its central bank fixed the daily midpoint at its strongest in five weeks, and a comment from the central bank chief that the exchange rate was at the “appropriate level” reinforced market sentiment.
Prior to market opening, the People's Bank of China (PBOC) set the midpoint rate CNY=PBOC at 7.0680 per dollar. It was 10 pips firmer than the previous fix of 7.0690, and the strongest since Sept.16.
In a statement posted on the International Monetary Fund website on Saturday, PBOC Governor Yi Gang said the yuan is at “an appropriate level” based on economic and market fundamentals.
“Depreciation since the beginning of August has been driven and determined by market forces and reflects shifts in market dynamics and volatilities in global foreign exchange markets, amid recent global economic and financial developments and escalating trade tensions,” Yi said.
Additional reporting by Tomo Uetake in Sydney Editing by Mark Heinrich
https://www.reuters.com/article/global-forex/forex-dollar-downbeat-as-brexit-optimism-lifts-pound-and-euro-idUSL5N2764NK
2019-10-21 11:21:00Z
CBMieGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnJldXRlcnMuY29tL2FydGljbGUvZ2xvYmFsLWZvcmV4L2ZvcmV4LWRvbGxhci1kb3duYmVhdC1hcy1icmV4aXQtb3B0aW1pc20tbGlmdHMtcG91bmQtYW5kLWV1cm8taWRVU0w1TjI3NjROS9IBNGh0dHBzOi8vbW9iaWxlLnJldXRlcnMuY29tL2FydGljbGUvYW1wL2lkVVNMNU4yNzY0Tks
Bagikan Berita Ini
0 Response to "FOREX-Dollar downbeat as Brexit optimism lifts pound and euro - Reuters"
Post a Comment