Dollar eases ahead of key U.S. inflation data

LONDON – The dollar eased further on Tuesday ahead of U.S. inflation data that could show some signs of softening, while the euro found its footing above parity on hawkish comments from policymakers that rates would need to increase further.

The dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of six currencies including the euro, eased 0.2 percent to 108.06, after falling 0.7 percent on Monday, the largest daily decline since August 10.

The euro rose 0.2 percent to $1.01405, after hitting a nearly one-month high of $1.0198 in the previous session.

The yen likewise eked out gains and last traded 0.4 percent higher at 142.29 per dollar, helped by comments from officials signaling the government could take steps to counter excessive yen weakness.

U.S. inflation figures are due at 1230 GMT and the consensus is for the core consumer price index to have risen 0.3 percent month-on-month in August, unchanged from July. Headline inflation is expected to decline 0.1 percent month-on-month.

Recent dollar gains have slowed on market expectations that peaking inflation will mean less aggressive interest rate hikes from the Federal Reserve.

“I think the Fed will hike by 75 basis points even if it is a soft number,” said Niels Christensen, chief analyst at Nordea. “But they then might say it’s time to slow the pace.”

“(Federal Reserve Chair) Jerome Powell was quite firm when he spoke last week. He made it very clear that they will fight inflation.”

Fed funds futures are fully pricing in a half point rate rise at next week’s Federal Open Market Committee meeting and currently imply an 89 percent chance of a 75 bp increase.

The euro has enjoyed a respite above parity due to hawkish noises from the European Central Bank. Last week, five sources close to the matter said Europe’s benchmark rate could rise to 2 percent or beyond to tame inflation.

On Tuesday, German harmonized inflation was confirmed at 8.8 percent in August, unrevised from the preliminary reading. Spanish consumer prices rose 10.5 percent year-on-year in August, slightly higher than the flash estimate.

Eyes were also on the gas situation in Europe, with the front month Dutch gas delivery contract, the benchmark for Europe, lower by another 4 percent on Tuesday and down by almost 46 percent from its peak in August.

“The decline in gas prices is one more reason for the bounce in the euro,” Nordea’s Christensen said, although he believes the recent strength to be short-lived as near-term tailwinds for the single currency fade.

“The situation would improve for the euro if gas prices were to move even further down, but we have to see that materializing to change our view,” Christensen added, expecting the euro to fall to $0.95 towards the end of the year.

Meanwhile, sterling rose to a two-week high against the dollar after the British jobless rate dropped to its lowest level since 1974 at 3.6 percent. The pound was last up 0.3 percent at $1.1718.

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