(Recasts with Fed decision, adds quotes, updates prices)
By Karen Brettell
NEW YORK, May 3 (Reuters) - The dollar fell on Wednesday after the Federal Reserve
raised interest rates by a quarter of a percentage point and signaled it may pause further
increases.
In an overt shift, the central bank no longer said it "anticipates" further rates will be
needed, only that it will watch incoming data to determine if more hikes "may be appropriate."
The pause would give officials time to assess the fallout from recent bank failures, wait on
the resolution of a political standoff over the U.S. debt ceiling, and monitor the course of
inflation.
The Fed did not explicitly commit to ending its hiking cycle, helping to lift the dollar off
session lows reached immediately after the central bank released its meeting statement.
"Some people might have been expecting some sort of explicit pause. I don't think that was
realistic but this is what a pause sounds like in reality," said Adam Button, chief currency
analyst at ForexLive in Toronto.
"The name of the game now is watching economic data and trying to find signs of weakness in
the U.S. economy or stubborn strength."
The dollar index was last down 0.42% on the day at 101.42, after hitting 101.05, the lowest
since April 26. The euro gained 0.46% at $1.1047 after reaching $1.1093. It is holding
just below a 13-month high of $1.1096 reached last week. The dollar also fell 1.02% against the
Japanese yen to 135.15.
The April jobs report due on Friday is this week's main economic focus. The dollar briefly
bounced after data earlier on Wednesday showed U.S. private employers boosted hiring in April
with strong demand in the leisure and hospitality industry, though wage growth slowed.
Other data on Wednesday showed the U.S. services sector maintained steady growth in April as
new orders increased amid a surge in exports, but businesses continued to face higher prices for
inputs, indicating that inflation could remain elevated.
Consumer price inflation due next week will also offer fresh clues on whether inflation is
continuing to ease.
"The Fed continues to walk the tight rope, and that is they're trying to strike a balance
between their inflation fighting credibility while trying to engineer a soft landing," said
Michael Arone, chief investment strategist at State Street Global Advisors in Boston.
The European Central Bank on Thursday is expected to hike rates by 25 basis points, with a
50 basis point increase also possible but seen as a low probability.
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Currency bid prices at 3:33PM (1933 GMT)
Description RIC Last U.S. Close Pct Change YTD Pct High Bid Low Bid
Previous Change
Session
Dollar index 101.4200 101.8600 -0.42% -2.000% +101.9200 +101.0500
Euro/Dollar $1.1047 $1.1000 +0.46% +3.13% +$1.1093 +$1.0999
Dollar/Yen 135.1500 136.5500 -1.02% +3.09% +136.6100 +134.8300
Euro/Yen 149.33 150.22 -0.59% +6.44% +150.3900 +149.3300
Dollar/Swiss 0.8863 0.8934 -0.79% -4.15% +0.8930 +0.8834
Sterling/Dollar $1.2546 $1.2469 +0.67% +3.80% +$1.2590 +$1.2470
Dollar/Canadian 1.3624 1.3626 -0.01% +0.55% +1.3639 +1.3583
Aussie/Dollar $0.6666 $0.6663 +0.05% -2.20% +$0.6703 +$0.6648
Euro/Swiss 0.9789 0.9825 -0.37% -1.07% +0.9829 +0.9791
Euro/Sterling 0.8802 0.8822 -0.23% -0.47% +0.8835 +0.8796
NZ $0.6223 $0.6207 +0.30% -1.95% +$0.6260 +$0.6206
Dollar/Dollar
Dollar/Norway 10.7700 10.8030 -0.42% +9.62% +10.8120 +10.7100
Euro/Norway 11.8958 11.8919 +0.03% +13.36% +11.9247 +11.8530
Dollar/Sweden 10.2636 10.2977 +0.02% -1.39% +10.3105 +10.2045
Euro/Sweden 11.3378 11.3350 +0.02% +1.69% +11.3611 +11.3109
(Reporting by Karen Brettell; Additional reporting by Herb Lash in New York; Editing by Richard
Chang)