Dollar dips
The US dollar lost some ground on Friday as high inflation wreaked havoc on consumer sentiment, but the greenback was on track for its third straight weekly gain after a surprisingly strong US inflation print shocked markets on Wednesday, prompting investors to advance their bets for a US rate hike.
The dollar turned red on Friday morning after the University of Michigan survey showed a plunge in US consumer sentiment in early November to its lowest level in a decade as surging inflation cut into households' living standards, with few believing policymakers are taking sufficient steps to mitigate the issue.
With short-dated US Treasury yields edging higher -- five-year bond yields rose to a February 2020 high -- investors were ramping up bets this week that US policymakers will be forced to raise interest rates sooner rather than later.
Against a basket of its rivals, at 10:41 a.m. EST (1541 GMT) the dollar index was down 0.06 per cent at 95.0960 after falling as low as 94.991 after the consumer sentiment news.
Earlier in the session it had risen to its highest level since July 2020.
"Consumers are clearly more worried about real income growth as inflation outpaces wages for now, and that is weighing on sentiment," said Erik Nelson, macro strategist at Wells Fargo.
"That is feeding into growth worries for the dollar and pushing it lower against most currencies, especially the Japanese yen as US yields decline here."
The dollar was down 0.16 per cent at 113.87 yen after falling as low as 113.77.
Currency markets have been shaken up since Wednesday when data showed a broad-based rise in US consumer prices last month at the fastest annual pace since 1990, casting doubts on the Federal Reserve's contention that price pressures will be transitory.
The renewed strength in the dollar earlier during the week had injected fresh life into the moribund currency volatility markets, as traders have scrambled to buy options to protect themselves against further dollar strength.
A currency volatility index hit a fresh six-month high on Friday.
Markets were pricing a first rate increase by July and a high likelihood of another by November.
CME data is assigning a 50 per cent probability of a rate hike by then, compared with less than 30 per cent a month earlier.
The euro was down 0.03 per cent at $1.1446 after falling earlier to an almost 16-month low at $1.1433.
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.
Sterling bulls received a slight reprieve on Friday as GBP/USD rebounded after hitting a fresh 2021 low, though the rise may only offer temporary solace as technical and fundamental factors pointed to further declines.
Stering was last up 0.33 per cent against the dollar.
It had gained ground in late morning as the dollar weakened and after the European Union said it was committed to coming to an agreement with the UK regarding Northern Ireland.
The risk-sensitive Australian dollar was up 0.37 per cent at $0.7318 after earlier sinking as low as $0.7277 for the first time in more than a month.
In cryptocurrencies, bitcoin was down 2.3 per cent at $63,324.12 after briefly hitting a record high of $69,000 earlier in the week.
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