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Dollar slips for second day on growing U.S. rate cut bets

Wednesday,   12-Jun-2019   02:59 PM (IST)

The dollar edged lower for a second consecutive day on Wednesday on growing expectations of a U.S. rate cut next week while high-yielding currencies suffered due to ongoing trade tensions. Against a basket of its rivals, the dollar edged 0.1 percent lower to 96.64 and just above a 2-1/2 month low of 96.46 hit last week. Trade differences between the world’s two biggest economies are starting to reflect in data with Chinese factory inflation slowing in May while recent comments by Fed officials have become increasingly cautious. Those concerns have also undermined appetite for risky currencies with the Australian dollar weakening 0.3% versus the Swiss franc and the perceived safe-haven Japanese yen rising 0.2% against the dollar. A Fed watch tool by CME assigns a 18% probability of a U.S. rate cut next week and a 68% probability of a cut in July. Rising rate cut bets have also been helped by easing inflation pressures with underlying price pressures remaining muted. Core CPI inflation is expected to print at 1.9% in May compared to 2% in April. The euro was broadly steady at $1.1360 and in close reach of a three-month peak of $1.1348 scaled on Friday. The single currency was little affected by U.S. President Donald Trump’s accusation that Europe was devaluing the euro, which has gained roughly 1.4% against the dollar so far in June.