Dollar climbs for a 3rd day as short-end U.S. yields rise

LONDON, Nov 12 (Reuters) – The dollar tiptoed higher for a 3rd consecutive day on Friday since a surprisingly strong U.S. inflation print shocked markets and prompted investors to advance their bets on a U.S rate hike to as early as mid-2022.

With short-dated U.S. Treasury yields edging higher — five-year bond yields rose to a February 2020 high — investors ramped up bets that U.S. policymakers will be forced to raise interest rates sooner than later.

Against a basket of its rivals, the dollar index firmed 0.1% to 95.27, its highest level since July 2020. The greenback’s push higher this week has seen it break above a two-month trading range with analysts predicting more gains.

“We don’t think this is the end of the move and expect the U.S. dollar to remain strong into the first half of 2022 as we will be going into the first half of 2022 with the Fed’s taper coming to a conclusion and a looming rate hike will offer support for the dollar in this period,” Mizuho strategists said.

The renewed strength in the dollar has injected fresh life in the moribund currency volatility markets as traders have scrambled to buy options to protect themselves against further dollar strength. A currency volatility index (.DBCVIX) hit a fresh 6-month high.

Data on Wednesday showed a broad-based rise in U.S. consumer prices last month at the fastest annual pace since 1990, calling into question the Fed’s contention that price pressures will be “transitory” and fuelling speculation that policymakers would lift interest rates sooner than previously thought.

Markets now price a first rate increase by July and a high likelihood of another by November. CME data is assigning a 50% probability of a rate hike by then compared to less than 30% a month earlier.

The euro slipped back to a 16-month low at $1.1436, and sterling dipped to $1.3354, its weakest level this year.

Investors have become increasingly bearish on the outlook for the single currency as the European Central Bank appears unlikely to change its extremely dovish policy settings in the near term against a backdrop of a slowing economy.

The risk-sensitive Australian dollar sank as low as $0.7277 for the first time in more than a month while in cryptocurrencies, bitcoin traded just south of $65,000, down from a record $69,000 earlier in the week.Reporting by Saikat Chatterjee; Additional reporting by Kevin Buckland in TOKYO; Editing by

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

This article was originally published by Reuters.

Global Business Magazine

Recent Posts

Dubai Emerges as a New Listing Hub as Yuan Bonds Gain Ground in the Middle East

Dubai is steadily positioning itself as a preferred destination for debt and equity listings as…

1 week ago

DUBAI REAL ESTATE SHOWS STRENGTH AS DEVELOPERS DRIVE SALES ACROSS LUXURY AND AFFORDABLE SECTORS

Emaar maintains market leading position while Binghatti rises as city’s top developer in total sales volume…

1 week ago

IMF Executive Board Completes the Fourth Review under the Extended Credit Facility Arrangement for Ethiopia

The IMF Executive Board completed the fourth review of the arrangement under the Extended Credit…

1 week ago

Nisus Finance Bets Big on Dubai Residential Market with ₹536 Crore Motor City Acquisition

Nisus Finance Services Company Limited (NiFCO) has made its largest property investment in the United…

1 week ago

Gulf Markets Slide as Saudi-UAE Tensions over Yemen Rattle Investors

Gulf equity markets ended mostly lower as renewed Saudi-UAE tensions over Yemen rattled investor confidence

2 weeks ago

RELEASE OF THE JANUARY 2026 WORLD ECONOMIC OUTLOOK UPDATE

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) will release the January 2026 World Economic Outlook (WEO) Update…

2 weeks ago