"Given the data calendar today is pretty light, I think currencies are likely remain in the recent ranges and markets will be pretty quiet going into the weekend." The number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment benefits jumped to a 1-1/2-year high last week, pointing to cracks in the labour market as demand slows, according to data on Thursday, which also showed that producer prices rebounded modestly in April. The reports were seen as consistent with most economists' expectations of a recession by the end of the year. Markets are pricing in a 98% chance of the Fed standing pat in its June meeting but has started to price in deep cuts in interest rates by the end of the year, the CME FedWatch Tool showed. Rate futures contracts point to trader expectations for the Fed to start cuts in September. Minneapolis Federal Reserve President Neel Kashkari said on Thursday that an extended period of high interest rates and an inverted yield curve could put more stress on banks, but would be necessary if inflation stays stubbornly high. Christopher Wong, a currency strategist at OCBC, said there is still a wide disconnect between markets and the Fed on the timing and size of rate cuts, with markets looking for cuts of around 75 to 80 basis points, while the Fed seems to be determined to keep rates on hold.
"There will be volatility when the market adjusts to close up the disconnect," Wong said. "In the event, markets will eventually unwind their dovish hopes and re-align their rate expectations with the Fed, then USD may still find some support." Fed policymakers have about five more weeks of data to parse before their next meeting, and have said they intend to sift through it carefully before making their decision. Also weighing on sentiment was the looming deadline for the U.S. debt ceiling, with Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen due to discuss the impasse over raising the debt ceiling with board members of the Bank Policy Institute lobby group next week.
Meanwhile, China's yuan weakened past a key threshold to
a new two-month low against the dollar on Friday, while the
Aussie and the Kiwi both slid to their one-week lows.
The Australian dollar was last down 0.09% at $0.670, while the New Zealand dollar fell 0.57% to $0.626.
Data through the week suggested that China's economic recovery is losing steam, with weak confidence holding back post-pandemic spending and growth. Weak inflation and credit developments will likely prompt China's central bank to ease monetary policy to support the recovery this year, said Silvia Dall’Angelo, senior economist at Federated Hermes. "We still expected Chinese growth to overshoot the government's 5% target for this year."
Elsewhere, sterling clawed back some of its losses and was last trading at $1.2523, up 0.11% on the day, after dropping 0.6% on Thursday.
The pound hovered close to its one-week low of $1.2497 it touched on Thursday after the Bank of England raised its key interest rate by a quarter of a percentage point to 4.5%.
NatWest strategists said the absence of any dovish dilution to the BoE’s policy guidance leaves the door open to further tightening but they believe inflation may ease through this year and that might mean further increases may not occur. "We continue to think that headline inflation will come off rapidly in the months ahead, while lagged headwinds to the consumer from higher rates will dampen demand, meaning 4.5% will likely be the peak in Bank Rate." The euro was up 0.09% to $1.0924, while the Japanese yen was mostly flat at 134.53 per dollar <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ World FX rates ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^> (Reporting by Ankur Banerjee in Singapore; Editing by Christian Schmollinger and Kim Coghill)
Twitter: @AnkurBanerjee17;))