"The dollar has bounced back but also we've had comments from the Bank of Japan indicating that there is no real reason for them to pull back from their ultra easy policy." Expectations of higher interest rates relative to global peers tend to boost a currency by making investments there look more attractive, and vice versa. New Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda last week made clear that the country would remain a "dovish" outlier by keeping interest rates at ultra-low levels for the time being. Meanwhile, pricing in derivatives markets shows traders think there's a roughly 84% chance the Fed will hike rates again by 25 basis points in May, up from around 69% last week . That increase came after past U.S. retail sales figures were revised upwards, a Fed official said rate hikes were yet to have the desired effect, and consumer inflation expectations rose on Friday. The euro was roughly flat against the dollar on Monday at $1.098. It hit a one-year high of $1.108 on Friday, with traders expecting further interest rate hikes from the European Central Bank even as the Fed nears a pause. Sterling slipped 0.07% to $1.241, after hitting a 10-month high of $1.255 on Friday. Tina Teng, market analyst at CMC Markets, said better than expected bank results from the likes of JPMorgan , Citigroup and Wells Fargo had also pushed up U.S. rate expectations.
They suggested that "the U.S. economy is not so bad," she said. Bank of America and Goldman Sachs are due to report on Tuesday. Foley said investors would monitor comments from the Fed, with Austan Goolsbee, Christopher Waller, and Loretta Mester among the U.S. officials due to speak this week. Foley expects one more 25 basis point rate hike from the Fed in May before it holds rates steady for the rest of the year. Elsewhere, the Australian dollar was down 0.13% at $0.67 on Monday. <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ World FX rates Dollar hits one-month high against yen ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^> (Reporting by Harry Robertson in London and Rae Wee in Singapore; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman and Mark Potter)
Rae.Wee@thomsonreuters.com))