By Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss
NEW YORK (Reuters) – The U.S. dollar slid against major currencies on Tuesday, on some expectation that the Federal Reserve will signal a slower pace of tightening at its upcoming meeting to assess the impact of its rate hikes on the economy.
Investors widely expect the Fed this week to raise its benchmark overnight interest rate by 75 basis points (bps) to a range of 3.75% to 4.00%, the fourth such increase in a row.
But for December, the fed funds futures market has priced in a 57% probability of a 50-bps increase amid suggestions from Fed officials of a potential slowdown in the tightening pace. That was down, however, from roughly a 70% chance last Friday.
“There is some optimism that there could be a change in the language following the FOMC (Federal Open Market Committee) meeting this week that would suggest a deceleration could come for the next time,” said Ivan Asensio, head of FX risk advisory at Silicon Valley Bank in San Francisco.
The Bank of England (BoE) is also meeting this week and expected to deliver a 75-bps increase as well. Traders then expect the BoE to slow down and raise rates by 50 bps in December.
In afternoon trading, the dollar fell 0.4% to 148.20 yen.
Sterling rose 0.1% to $1.1479 after dropping more than 1% on Monday. The euro edged lower to $0.9878.
The U.S. dollar index, which measures the greenback against six rivals, including the euro, sterling and yen, was slightly lower at 111.49.
The dollar index has surged more than 15% this year as the Fed has hiked rates hard, crushing other currencies and heaping pressure on the global economy.
Investors have therefore taken cheer from speeches and interviews by some Fed officials that have suggested the central bank could do smaller hikes after Wednesday’s meeting.
“Although the Fed may discuss downshifting at the December meeting, Powell will probably avoid pre-committing to such an action at this time,” said Joseph Kalish, chief global macro strategist at Ned Davis Research.
“He will reiterate the Fed will be data-dependent and will decide meeting by meeting.”
Markets were also reminded on Monday that global inflation remains stubbornly high when data showed euro zone prices surged by the most on record in the year through October.
The risk-sensitive Australian and New Zealand dollars rose from one-week lows amid the broad lift in market sentiment. The Aussie was little changed at US$0.6397, while the Kiwi dollar rose 0.5% to US$0.5840.
The Aussie earlier fell after the Reserve Bank of Australia decided to stick with a slower quarter-point pace for rate hikes despite a surprise jump in inflation to a 32-year high in the third quarter.
In other currencies, the Chinese yuan fell to a near 15-year low against the dollar on Tuesday, before paring its losses after the central bank fixed the official guidance rate on the weaker side of the key 7.2 per dollar level for the first time since 2008. The dollar was last down 0.5% against the offshore yuan at 7.3033.
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Currency bid prices at 3:16PM (1916 GMT)
Description RIC Last U.S. Close Pct Change YTD Pct High Bid Low Bid
Previous Change
Session
Dollar index 111.4800 111.5400 -0.04% 16.534% +111.7800 +110.7000
Euro/Dollar $0.9880 $0.9881 -0.01% -13.09% +$0.9954 +$0.9854
Dollar/Yen 148.2150 148.7500 -0.35% +28.76% +148.8200 +146.9900
Euro/Yen 146.47 146.99 -0.35% +12.39% +147.1200 +145.9900
Dollar/Swiss 0.9999 1.0022 -0.23% +9.61% +1.0020 +0.9917
Sterling/Dollar $1.1482 $1.1467 +0.13% -15.10% +$1.1565 +$1.1437
Dollar/Canadian 1.3620 1.3624 -0.02% +7.74% +1.3668 +1.3532
Aussie/Dollar $0.6398 $0.6397 +0.01% -11.99% +$0.6464 +$0.6377
Euro/Swiss 0.9880 0.9896 -0.16% -4.72% +0.9921 +0.9852
Euro/Sterling 0.8603 0.8619 -0.19% +2.42% +0.8624 +0.8597
NZ $0.5840 $0.5815 +0.46% -14.66% +$0.5902 +$0.5818
Dollar/Dollar
Dollar/Norway 10.3450 10.3970 -0.44% +17.50% +10.3895 +10.2370
Euro/Norway 10.2237 10.2741 -0.49% +2.11% +10.2885 +10.1696
Dollar/Sweden 11.0087 11.0227 -0.22% +22.08% +11.0741 +10.9165
Euro/Sweden 10.8786 10.9021 -0.22% +6.30% +10.9116 +10.8506
(Reporting by Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss; Additional reporting by Harry Robertson in London and Kevin Buckland in Sydney; Editing by Jan Harvey, Mark Potter and Mark Heinrich)