The dollar, supported by safe-haven flows, was at its highest level in a month versus its major peers. Asian currencies dropped. The dollar found support from the move up in U.S. yields. The two-year U.S. yield was back to near 4% following data that slightly pushed up the possibility of a rate hike by the Federal Reserve in June. The odds though remained overwhelmingly in favour of a pause. A survey from the University of Michigan showed long-term inflation expectations jumping this month to their highest reading since 2011.
A couple of Fed officials on Friday indicated some uncertainty about whether the U.S. central bank will in fact pause interest rate hikes next month. Meanwhile, the one-year implied USD/INR yield dropped to 2.06%, thanks to the rise in U.S. yields and India's April inflation data which eased to a 19-month low of 4.7% in April. "We believe a macro regime shift is underway from high growth-high inflation to low growth-low inflation, which is likely to cause the RBI to pause in the near term," Nomura said in a note. (Reporting by Nallur Sethuraman in Mumbai; Editing by Sohini Goswami)