Dollar regains some poise after China dismisses U.S. bonds report

FAN Editor
FILE PHOTO: Illustration photo of U.S. Dollar and China Yuan notes
FILE PHOTO: U.S. Dollar and China Yuan notes are seen in this picture illustration June 2, 2017. REUTERS/Thomas White/Illustration/File Photo

January 11, 2018

By Tommy Wilkes

LONDON (Reuters) – The dollar recouped some of its recent losses on Thursday after China’s regulator dismissed a report that the country could halt its buying of U.S. treasuries, boosting the greenback following its biggest one-day fall in a month.

The dollar has been struggling to gain traction in the opening days of 2018 after losing around 10 percent against a basket of currencies last year as economic growth elsewhere, notably Europe, overtook the U.S.

And while the U.S. Federal Reserve has been slowly tightening policy over the last two years, traders have been repricing market expectations of when Europe and Japan will follow suit.

Bloomberg News had reported on Wednesday that Chinese officials reviewing the country’s foreign exchange holdings had recommended slowing or halting purchases of U.S. Treasury bonds, pushing 10-year yields higher and the dollar lower.

China’s foreign exchange regulator said the report could be based on erroneous information, adding that the country was diversifying its forex to safeguard their value.

The dollar then rallied and was up 0.4 percent against the yen, although the U.S. currency is still down more than 1 percent against the yen this week after markets bet the Bank of Japan (BoJ) could start to tighten monetary policy faster than expected.

Against a basket of currencies the dollar was up 0.2 percent on Thursday, off the previous day’s near three-month lows.

Many analysts remain bearish.

“We go into the year on the proviso that the while the dollar may have become a little oversold and due a moderate correction, we favor the dollar structural depreciation to extend,” Jeremy Stretch, currency strategist at London-based CIBC Capital Markets, told the Reuters Global Markets Forum.

“While we favor another year of euro gains these will be less pronounced than in 2017. We do however favor yen outperformance as assume that investors have become overly complacent as regards BoJ policy.”

The dollar was flat against the euro <EUR=EBS>, holding below the key level of $1.20 before the publication of the minutes of the last European Central Bank meeting in December, when policymakers held monetary policy unchanged.

Market sentiment seems tilted toward the dollar’s downside, said Masashi Murata, currency strategist for Brown Brothers Harriman in Tokyo.

“Market reaction to dollar-buying factors has been subdued, while market reactions to dollar-selling, and yen-buying factors, have been more vivid,” Murata said.

The Canadian dollar <CAD=D3> weakened to its lowest level this year, before recovering, as worries of a U.S. withdrawal from the North American Free Trade Agreement moderated bets that the Bank of Canada will raise interest rates next week.

The Australian dollar touched its highest levels in nearly three months at $0.7887 <AUD=D3> after data showed that Australian retail sales recorded the biggest monthly rise in four years in November.

Bitcoin tumbled another 10 percent after South Korea said it would move to ban cryptocurrency trading.

(Additional reporting by Masayuki Kitano in SINGAPORE and Kirsten Donovan in LONDON; Editing by Saikat Chatterjee and John Stonestreet)

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