The dollar firmed on Tuesday, while the beleaguered sterling wallowed near recent lows on lingering fears about the impact on Britain from exiting the European Union and the kiwi tumbled on dovish comments from a New Zealand central bank official.
Japanese, Canadian and some US markets were closed on Monday for holidays.
The dollar index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six major rivals, added 0.1 per cent to 97.024.
“The US dollar’s grind higher continues, clearly linked to changing Fed rate hike expectations,” said Sue Trinh, head of Asia FX strategy at Royal Bank of Canada in Hong Kong.
“A little over three weeks ago, we had expectations of a December rate hike at under 50 per cent, and now we’re pushing towards 70 per cent,” she said. “So the onus is on the data now, to continue printing firmly.”
Market participants were pricing in around a 70 per cent chance that the Fed will raise rates in December, according to CME Group’s FedWatch programme.
Minutes of FOMC meet
Investors awaited Wednesday’s release of minutes of the Federal Reserve Open Market Committee's September meeting for clues as to how close the Fed is to hiking interest rates.
Speaking to reporters after a speech in Sydney, Chicago Fed President Charles Evans said on Tuesday that he “could be fine’’ with the Fed raising rates in December, but he wanted to see how the economy and inflation progressed before deciding.
Evans does not have a vote this year on Fed policy but participates fully in deliberations and will become a voting member in 2017.
“At the end of the day, it’s a dollar strength story, and after that, it’s currency positioning. That's really the driving factor,” said Bart Wakabayashi, head of Hong Kong FX sales at State Street Global Markets.
Sterling, meanwhile, was down 0.3 per cent against the dollar at $1.2324, below its overnight low of $1.2345, in the wake of Friday's “flash crash” that sent it hurtling to its lowest levels in 31 years.
“Economic data does not help very much to explain sterling’s movement. The fact of the matter is that the UK has fared well in the three-and-half months since the referendum,’’ wrote Marc Chandler, global head of currency strategy at Brown Brothers Harriman.
“The depreciation of sterling will have an impact on the UK current account balance,” he said. “It will be reduced, but do not be surprised if it comes from reduced volume of imports as much as an increase in value of exports.”
Japan current account data
Japanese current account data released earlier on Tuesday showed the nation’s surplus stood at ¥2.0 trillion ($19.3 billion) in August as the trade balance swung to a surplus due to falling imports.
The dollar was last up 0.3 per cent against the yen at 103.93 yen, shy of last week’s high of 104.17 but above Monday’s low of 102.80 yen.
The euro edged down slightly to at $1.1133.
Dovish comments
The New Zealand dollar tumbled 1 per cent to $0.7063 after falling as low as $0.7062, its weakest since July 28, after the country’s central bank bluntly warned that further policy easing would be needed to push inflation higher.
The Australian dollar hit a three-week low of $0.7540 and was last down 0.7 per cent at $0,7553, falling in sympathy with the kiwi and as its US counterpart strengthened on expectations of an interest rate hike by the Fed as early as December.
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