The personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index, tracked by the Fed for monetary policy rose 0.6% last month after gaining 0.2% in December. In the 12 months through January, the PCE price index accelerated 5.4% after rising 5.3% in December. Consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of U.S. economic activity, jumped 1.8% last month, according to the Commerce Department. Data for December was revised higher to show spending dipping 0.1% instead falling 0.2% as previously reported. "The data was pretty strong all around and amazingly, there were positive revisions, as well. And so that's really saying something. For the dollar, it's in the driver's seat," said Mazen Issa, senior FX strategist at TD Securities in New York. "I think (Fed Chair Jerome) Powell floated the mission accomplished banner way too soon this month, just ahead of the payrolls report. Certainly, it looks like his comments were poorly placed. And it looks like the markets have priced out any chance of a cut this year, which is a sizable shift given that barely four weeks ago, the market was looking at cuts in the second half of this year. That adjustment is a dollar-positive dynamic." In mid-morning trading, the dollar index rose 0.7% to 105.26, after earlier hitting a seven-week high of 105.32.
The euro fell 0.5% against the greenback at $1.054. Earlier in the session, it dropped to a seven-week low of $1.0536. Sterling was down 0.68% against the dollar at $1.1938.
The U.S. currency advanced to a two-month high versus the yen of 136.44 yen and last changed hands at 136.29, up 1.2%.
Versus the Swiss franc, the dollar rose to a seven-week peak of 0.9390 francs and was last up 0.5% at 0.9386 .
Strong U.S. jobs data and rhetoric from Federal Reserve officials this month about openness to higher rates if needed to bring down still-high inflation have helped the dollar to erase its year-to-date losses. Money markets are now positioned for a peak in U.S. interest rates of 5.4% in July, and expect it to stay above 5% all year, compared with the current target rate of 4.5-4.75%. The markets have also priced in rate hikes over the next three meetings. "Now that you're at a higher interest rate level, the nuancing and what that terminal rate is, is a little bit trickier to sort of triangulate. For FX markets, there's been a shift from being short dollars to this idea of, ‘well, if we're not going for a hard landing or soft landing, is there a landing.' The market is going to be whipsawed over that," Issa said. "At the end of the day, we're really learning that the U.S. economy is far more resilient than the market had anticipated. And in that environment, that perceived terminal rate that the market had and certainly the perceived terminal rate that is embedded in the Fed dot plot … may not be restrictive enough." ======================================================== Currency bid prices at 9:57 A.M. (1457 GMT) Description RIC Last U.S. Close Pct Change YTD Pct High Bid Low Bid Previous Change
Session
Dollar index 105.1800 104.5700 +0.59% 1.633% +105.3200 +104.4100
Euro/Dollar $1.0547 $1.0594 -0.44% -1.56% +$1.0615 +$1.0536
Dollar/Yen 136.1850 134.6800 +1.12% +3.88% +136.4450 +134.0500
Euro/Yen 143.64 142.70 +0.66% +2.39% +143.8200 +142.1700
Dollar/Swiss 0.9384 0.9340 +0.48% +1.49% +0.9390 +0.9327
Sterling/Dollar $1.1948 $1.2018 -0.55% -1.17% +$1.2042 +$1.1928
Dollar/Canadian 1.3640 1.3550 +0.66% +0.67% +1.3665 +1.3529
Aussie/Dollar $0.6729 $0.6808 -1.14% -1.26% +$0.6824 +$0.6719
Euro/Swiss 0.9898 0.9892 +0.06% +0.03% +0.9914 +0.9889
Euro/Sterling 0.8825 0.8818 +0.08% -0.24% +0.8835 +0.8799
NZ $0.6165 $0.6227 -1.04% -2.95% +$0.6243 +$0.6153
Dollar/Dollar
Dollar/Norway 10.3810 10.3010 +0.90% +5.91% +10.3960 +10.2965
Euro/Norway 10.9450 10.9132 +0.29% +4.35% +10.9676 +10.9056
Dollar/Sweden 10.4551 10.4326 -0.15% +0.45% +10.4839 +10.3873
Euro/Sweden 11.0229 11.0393 -0.15% -1.09% +11.0577 +10.9979
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(Reporting by Laura Matthews
Editing by Marguerita Choy)