Forex

Dollar faces loss as Fed increased interest rate

On Wednesday, the Fed increased its benchmark funds rate by 25 basis points but dropped some hints about “ongoing increases” needing a favor for “some additional” rises.

The U.S. dollar faced some loss on Thursday after the Federal Reserve was close to calling time on the interest rate increase, while the Bank of England and Swiss National Bank promoted further increase rate ahead.

The dollar hit a seven-week low on Friday as nervousness among banks unsettled investors and traders weighed the Federal Reserve’s chances of halting rate hikes.

The Fed’s rate hike was notable as financial markets suffered from losing confidence in banks worldwide following the run on Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) two weeks ago and the sudden collapse of Credit Suisse bank Switzerland.

According to the senior market analyst at Convera, Joe Manimbo, if the banking crisis eases significantly and inflation stays stubbornly high, this could be a recipe for a dollar recovery, as perhaps the Fed could go full steam ahead with anti-inflation and not be so worried about the banking crisis wreaking havoc on the economy.

The dollar index measures the currency against other rivals and has declined by 0.097% at 102.48, just higher than the seven-week low of 101.91 on Thursday. On Thursday, the index experienced a small gain, its first in six trading days.

Related Post

Other markets affected by Fed rate

According to the CME FedWatch tool, the markets are currently showing a 68 percent likelihood of the Federal Reserve increasing rates at their upcoming meeting and a 32 percent probability of a 25-basis point rise.

As the central bank is working to balance tackling inflation with worries about financial market turmoil, the Swiss National Bank has also increased its policy rate by 50 basis points.

The Australian dollar increased by 0.07% to $0.669, while the kiwi declined to $0.624.

The yen increased by 0.51% to 130.16 per dollar. It reached a six-week high of 130.055. Analysts said the data supported market expectations for a near-term correction in the bond yield control policy, with inflation still above the bank of Japan’s 2% target.

Euro increased to a seven-week high of $1.0930 before decreasing by the gap. It was at $1.08480. At the same time, the Sterling increased by 0.13% against the dollar to %1.22845.

Recent Posts

AUD/JPY Climbs Back to 102.20, Halting Losses

Key Points: AUD/JPY broke below a rising wedge, signalling possible bearish momentum, with immediate resistance at 103.00 and support at…

4 days ago

EUR/JPY Hit 168.25, Boosted by 0.3% Q1 GDP Growth

Key Points EUR/JPY Rises to 168.25: Strengthened by robust Eurozone economy and steady ECB policy. Eurozone GDP Grew by 0.3%…

4 days ago

Chinese Electric Vehicle Market: Nio Stock Up 20%

Key Points: Nio's shares hit 44.20 HKD, up 20%, with electric vehicle deliveries up 134.6% year-on-year to 15,620. BYD leads…

5 days ago

Ethereum Price Dips Below $3,120 Amid Market Slump

Key Points: Ethereum fell sharply from $3,355 to a low of $2,813, reflecting high volatility and sensitivity to market dynamics.…

5 days ago

Stock Markets: Nikkei Down 0.1%, Hang Seng Up 2.4%

Key Points Nikkei 225 slightly fell by 0.1%, while the Hang Seng index surged by 2.4%. USD/JPY increased slightly, highlighting…

5 days ago

Gold Price Increases to ₹71,278 and $2,328

Key Points: Gold prices rose on MCX India to ₹71,278/10 gm and COMEX US to $2,328/oz. The US Dollar Index…

5 days ago

This website uses cookies.