Session
Dollar index 101.6800 101.4400 +0.25% -1.749% +101.8400 +101.3500
Euro/Dollar $1.0958 $1.1005 -0.42% +2.27% +$1.1003 +$1.0941
Dollar/Yen 135.0700 135.1450 -0.03% +3.04% +135.3450 +134.7250
Euro/Yen 148.02 148.69 -0.45% +5.50% +148.6900 +147.9000
Dollar/Swiss 0.8923 0.8897 +0.29% -3.50% +0.8943 +0.8890
Sterling/Dollar $1.2600 $1.2618 -0.11% +4.22% +$1.2639 +$1.2580
Dollar/Canadian 1.3397 1.3373 +0.18% -1.12% +1.3405 +1.3367
Aussie/Dollar $0.6756 $0.6781 -0.35% -0.87% +$0.6787 +$0.6747
Euro/Swiss 0.9776 0.9787 -0.11% -1.20% +0.9800 +0.9774
Euro/Sterling 0.8695 0.8719 -0.28% -1.68% +0.8725 +0.8692
NZ $0.6325 $0.6345 -0.28% -0.35% +$0.6349 +$0.6320
Dollar/Dollar
Dollar/Norway 10.5650 10.5050 +0.60% +7.68% +10.5840 +10.5200
Euro/Norway 11.5736 11.5493 +0.21% +10.29% +11.6028 +11.5483
Dollar/Sweden 10.2068 10.1571 -0.02% -1.93% +10.2147 +10.1520
Euro/Sweden 11.1808 11.1828 -0.02% +0.28% +11.1961 +11.1622
<^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
World FX rates ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>
(Reporting by Laura Matthews and Iain Withers; Additional reporting by Alun John in London and Rae Wee in
Singapore; Editing by Angus MacSwan, Christina Fincher and Jonathan Oatis)
(Updates prices, adds comments in paragraphs 3 and 5, adds byline and NEW YORK to dateline)
By Laura Matthews and Iain Withers
NEW YORK/LONDON, May 9 (Reuters) - The dollar clung to modest gains against major currencies on
Tuesday but remained rangebound as traders awaited U.S. debt ceiling talks and tried to digest how a host of
conflicting economic data will influence monetary policy and global growth.
Chinese imports contracted sharply in April from a year earlier while exports grew more slowly than in
March, which had a limited impact on currencies, but contributed to risk-off moves broadly across markets.
"Overnight, you get the China data ... which is undermining this ever-emerging narrative about the China
rebound," said Alvise Marino, macro trading strategist at Credit Suisse in New York. "The uncertainty about
the growth outlook is still very much an important part of the picture."
Closely-watched U.S. inflation data due on Wednesday is likely to set the tone for markets, after
stronger-than-expected jobs data last week.
"The conversation about sticky inflation is very much prevalent in the market. The fact that the Fed may
not be cutting interest rates this year, that is in line with our view," said Jane Foley, head of FX
strategy at Rabobank in London. "That conversation brings us right up to that CPI data, and if the Fed is
going to be data-dependent, well, this is going to be an important release. The market is watching the
data."
Any Federal Reserve policy tweaks will have to be weighed against a backdrop of recent turmoil in the
U.S. banking sector and a political impasse in Washington over lifting the country's debt ceiling and
avoiding a default, analysts said.
The Fed's quarterly survey of bank loan officers released on Monday showed that credit conditions for
U.S. businesses and households continued to tighten at the start of the year, most likely due to interest
rate hikes.
The closely watched survey was among the first measures of sentiment in the banking sector since the
recent run of bank failures, sparked by Silicon Valley Bank's collapse in March.
Against a basket of currencies, the U.S. dollar index edged up 0.25% to 101.68, but remained near
recent lows as traders eye a peak in U.S. rates. The euro dipped 0.41% to $1.0958.
Sterling was broadly flat and bought $1.2599, ahead of Thursday's central bank policy meeting.
The Bank of England looks set to raise interest rates to 4.5%, as it tries to fight the highest
inflation rate in Western Europe.
The Japanese yen was last seen trading at 135.075 per dollar, with Bank of Japan (BOJ)
Governor Kazuo Ueda signalling that the central bank may end its yield curve control policy and start
shrinking its balance sheet.
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Currency bid prices at 10:18AM (1418 GMT)
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