The dollar stood firm against its peers on Friday, finding support as the latest round of US-China trade tensions dulled investor risk appetite, with weakness in emerging market currencies also helping lift the greenback.
The dollar index against a basket of six major currencies stood little changed at 94.721. The index had nudged up about 0.15 per cent overnight, posting its first gain five days. The greenback, which tends to attract safe haven bids in times of market turmoil and political tensions, drew its latest swell of support as investors braced for the next round of the US-China trade conflict.
“There is an ongoing trend to buy the dollar on the trade friction theme, which has negatively affected emerging market currencies and in turn fuels the dollar's rise,” said Junichi Ishikawa, senior FX strategist at IG Securities in Tokyo. “The euro has also taken hits, due to the euro zone's perceived exposure to emerging market economies.”
The euro was down 0.1 per cent at $1.1662 after losing about 0.3 per cent overnight. The single currency has been hit this month by the Turkish lira's tumble, which slid nearly 3 per cent against the dollar on Thursday.
Other notable decliner in emerging market currencies was Argentina's peso, which lost nearly one-fifth of its value on Thursday and fell to a record low versus the dollar. The peso has slid as investors' faith in President Mauricio's ability to tackle the economic crisis has evaporated. A huge hike in interest rates from Argentina's central bank did little to arrest the peso's fall.
The South African rand was little changed at 14.7 per dollar after retreating more than 2 per cent in overnight trade. China's yuan was about 0.1 per cent firmer in offshore trade at 6.8600 per dollar after shedding more than 0.7 per cent the previous day. The Japanese yen stood little changed at 111.000. The yen, another perceived safe haven along with the dollar, had advanced 0.6 per cent on Thursday.