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Dollar eases after strong gains on hawkish Fed bets; bitcoin tops $30,000 By Reuters
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IntroductionBy Kevin BucklandTOKYO (Reuters) - The U.S. dollar eased on Tuesday following its best rally this mo ...
By Kevin Buckland
TOKYO (Reuters) - The Lily Plan ForexU.S. dollar eased on Tuesday following its best rally this month against major peers as a resilient U.S. labour market bolstered the case for a Federal Reserve rate hike next month.
At the same time, bets for a peak in U.S. rates in coming months spurred leading cryptocurrency bitcoin to top $30,000 for the first time since June.
The Australian dollar jumped 0.46% to $0.66725, clawing back all of the previous day's losses, amid a thawing of trade tensions with China, as the pair agreed to end a dispute over Australian barley.
The - which measures the greenback against six major counterparts - slipped 0.16% to 102.31, following a 0.39% advance at the start of the week. The index had dropped to a two-month low of 101.40 on Wednesday.
The euro added 0.26% to $1.08885 after Monday's 0.34% retreat. Sterling ticked up 0.2% to $1.24085 having declined 0.23% overnight.
The dollar slipped 0.21% to 133.31 yen, after jumping 1.1% on Monday.
Selling pressure eased on the yen, which is highly sensitive to long-term U.S. bond yields, as the edged lower in Tokyo trading after a sharp two-day climb.
The Japanese currency's Monday slide was helped by new Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda, who vowed to stick with ultra-easy stimulus settings at his inauguration on Monday.
"The BOJ under Mr. Ueda will intentionally try to be behind the curve and push up inflation expectations a little further, so he needs to keep the exchange-rate stable," said Masayuko Kichikawa, chief macro strategist at Sumitomo Mitsui (NYSE:) Asset Management in Tokyo.
"It is highly likely that the U.S. economy will slow down in the second half of this year, leading to lower long-term interest rates over there, and if the BOJ does something to push up long-term interest rates here, that could strengthen the yen, undoing recent positive developments in Japan."
Traders now see the Fed as 71% likely to raise rates by another quarter point on May 3, after data released on Good Friday showed U.S. employers continued to hire at a strong pace in March, pushing down the jobless rate. Last week, money markets priced a hike next month as a coin toss.
The consumer price index (CPI), due on Wednesday, will be the next major clue for Fed policy direction.
"Financial markets have been too pessimistic about the U.S. economy since several small U.S. banks collapsed in March," Commonwealth Bank of Australia (OTC:) strategists Joseph Capurso and Kristina Clifton wrote in a client note, referring to the demise of SVB and (OTC:).
"Strong underlying CPI is likely to be the catalyst for a change in market pricing for May, and delay pricing for the start of rate cuts," they said, postulating the dollar index could lift toward the 100-day moving average at 103.91 this week.
Traders currently expect the Fed to start cutting rates from around September.
touched a fresh 10-month high at $30,438 on Tuesday before last fetching $30,053, after breaking free of recent ranges on Monday.
The digital token had been stuck between about $26,500 and $29,400 for the previous three weeks.
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