Tan said: "U.S. interest rates have risen, as the Michigan inflation expectations was stronger than expected, number one, and number two, (Fed officials) seem to be consistently hawkish by emphasizing that the Fed has no plan to cut interest rates." The dollar was up 0.18% against Japan's yen at 136.01, after rising 0.67% last week. Sterling was 0.28% higher at $1.248, rebounding after last week's 1.45% fall. Traders expect the Fed to cut interest rates sharply by the end of the year as U.S. growth slows. But Tan said big cuts are unlikely, and that the dollar could rise as traders change their minds. Other analysts said investors' concerns about the debt ceiling standoff was causing them to buy the safe-haven dollar, ahead of a key meeting between President Joe Biden and congressional leaders on Tuesday. The dollar was last up 0.38% at 19.654 Turkish lira after earlier jumping to 19.7 for the first time since March 10, when it hit a record high of 19.8 on a volatile trading day. Turkey headed for a runoff vote after President Tayyip Erdogan outperformed projections. The dollar sank 0.75% to 33.725 baht in onshore Thai trading. Thailand's opposition parties secured a stunning election win on Sunday, but it was far from certain whether they will form the next government, with parliamentary rules written by the military junta. "It appears that the political stability implied in the 'Goldilocks' outcome may be fuelling the (Thai baht) rally," said Vishnu Varathan, head of economics and strategy at Mizuho Bank.
Many investors expect the U.S. dollar to continue to decline in the coming months as inflation cools and the Fed pauses its rate hikes. "If you remove the uncertainty around the debt ceiling situation, the sentiment has been turning bearish against the dollar," said Khoon Goh, head of Asia research at ANZ. <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ World FX rates Dollar index ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^> (Reporting by Harry Robertson and Kevin Buckland; Editing by Jacqueline Wong and Bernadette Baum)
Kevin.Buckland@thomsonreuters.com))