© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: US dollar banknotes are shown in this illustration taken on July 17, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration
SINGAPORE (Reuters) – The dollar held steady on Monday as investors digested a raft of economic data released last week that boosted hopes that the Federal Reserve will slow the pace of interest rate hikes.
Data on Friday showed US non-farm payrolls increased by 223,000 jobs in December, while average earnings rose by 0.3%, less than expected and less than the 0.4% in the previous month.
There were other signs of a slowing economy, with US service industry activity contracting for the first time in more than two-and-a-half years in December amid weak demand.
That, which measures the US dollar against six major currencies, led to a decline of 1.15% on Friday. On Monday, the index, which has gained 8% in 2022, rose 0.01% to 103,720.
Investors pinned their hopes on the US central bank easing monetary policy. Fed fund futures now point to a 25% chance of a half point hike in February, down from about 50% a month ago.
However, analysts point to a still tight labor market that is likely to worry Fed officials.
“The December payroll report shows that the US jobs market is still too tight to allow the Fed to step down to a 25 basis point rate hike next month,” said Mansoor Mohiuddin, chief economist at Bank of Singapore.
“We expect the Fed to remain more hawkish than the market expects, which keeps us cautious about the near-term outlook for risky assets.”
With the next meeting of the Federal Reserve scheduled for the beginning of next month, investors will be focusing on the Consumer Price Index data due on Thursday.
Citi said it expects another “softer” core CPI reading with some upside risk, but said core inflation could pick up again in early 2023.
“We still expect the Fed to rise by 50 basis points in February as underlying inflation pressures remain strong and further easing of financial conditions is likely not a desirable outcome.”
Elsewhere, the Brazilian real has not yet circulated after supporters of far-right President Jair Bolsonaro were arrested after invading the country’s Congress, presidential palace and supreme court.
The Japanese yen strengthened 0.12% against the US currency, to 131.94 per dollar, while the British pound was last trading at $1.2099, up 0.06% on the day, after rising 1.5% on Friday.
The euro rose 0.11% to $1.0656, after closing 1.17% higher on Friday.
The Australian dollar rose 0.17% against the US currency, to $0.689, while it rose 0.02%, to $0.635.
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The currency bid prices are at 0128 GMT
Description RIC Last US Close Pct Change YTD Pct High Bid Low Bid
previous change
session
EUR/USD 1.0660 USD 1.0645 USD +0.14% -0.51% +1.0668 +1.0640 USD
USD/JPY 131.8650 132.0700 -0.13% +0.51% +132.2500 +131.7400
EUR/JPY 140.57 140.58 -0.01% +0.19% +140.8000 +140.4600
USD/CHF 0.9275 0.9279 -0.03% +0.32% +0.9279 +0.9264
GBP/USD 1.2104 1.2093 +0.12% +0.11% +1.2128 +1.2092
USD/CAD 1.3432 1.3448 -0.10% -0.85% +1.3444 +1.3420
AUD/USD 0.6891 0.6876 +0.28% +1.14% +0.6907 +0.6875
New Zealand 0.6348 0.6350 + 0.01% + 0.01% + 0.6372 + 0.6337
dollars / dollars
All spots
locations in Tokyo
Spots in Europe
twists
Tokyo forex market information from Bank of Japan