Greenback on track for weekly loss amid tariff tensions


2025-07-25T08:35:02+00:00

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Shafaq News

The dollar inched off two-week lows on Friday, but kept on
track for its biggest weekly drop in a month, as investors contended with U.S.
tariff negotiations before an August 1 deadline, while looking ahead to central
bank meetings next week.

Both the U.S. Federal Reserve and the Bank of Japan are
expected to hold rates at next week’s policy meetings, but traders are focusing
on the subsequent comments to gauge the timing of the next move.

“Next week’s BOJ policy meeting will be closely watched
for hints on the timing of the next rate hike,” said Carol Kong, currency
strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia.

The prospect of rate hikes by the BOJ had improved, she
added, after a trade deal struck with the United States this week lowered
tariffs to 15% on auto imports from Japan.

But a near-term rate hike is hardly a done deal with the
timing dependent on whether the economy can withstand the impact of U.S.
tariffs, four sources familiar with the BOJ’s thinking told Reuters.

The yen stood at 147.20 to the dollar, on course for a
weekly gain of nearly 1%, although the currency was weaker on the day as
investors weighed monetary policy outlook and the fate of embattled Japanese
Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba.

A majority of economists in a Reuters poll this week said
they expect Japan’s central bank to raise interest rates by 25 basis points
this year.

The dollar index , which measures the U.S. currency against
six other units, was at 97.448, set for a drop of 1% this week, its weakest
performance in a month.

On Thursday, the European Central Bank left its policy rate
at 2%, as expected, in a break from a year of policy easing, to await clarity
over future U.S. trade ties after the European Commission said a negotiated
solution was in reach ahead of the August 1 deadline.

The euro was little changed at $1.174, but not far from
$1.183, the near four-year high it touched at the start of the month. The euro
is up 13.5% this year as tariff policies take the shine off the dollar.

Progress on trade deals has also raised market hopes for
talks with China, after U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said officials of
both countries would meet in Stockholm next week to discuss an extension of the
deal negotiation deadline.

The Australian dollar has been boosted by the rise in risk
appetite after the trade deals and was last at $0.6593, hovering near an
eight-month high touched on Thursday.

Trump’s Fed visit

Donald Trump locked horns on Thursday with Fed Chair Jerome
Powell during a rare presidential visit to the central bank, criticising the
cost of renovating two historical buildings at its headquarters and pressing
the case for lower interest rates.

Markets mostly shrugged off the visit, however, having
become accustomed to Trump’s repeated tirades against Powell and the Fed.

“Trump’s Fed visit was spectacle over substance,”
said Prashant Newnaha, senior Asia-Pacific rates strategist at TD Securities.

“The market’s focus is firmly on next week’s Fed
meeting. We expect Powell to repeat a patient, data-dependent policy outlook
with flexibility but (he) is unlikely to commit to cuts.”

At their two-day rate-setting meet, the central bank’s 19
policymakers are widely expected to leave their benchmark interest rate in the
range of 4.25% to 4.50%. Traders are pricing in 43 basis points of rate cuts by
the end of 2025.

ANZ strategists expect the Fed to cut rates by 25 basis
points in September and again in December.

“Were it not for tariff uncertainty, we judge that rate
cuts would already have resumed,” they said in a note.

“The labour market is weakening, service price
disinflation is well established, demand growth has slowed and there is no
discernible evidence that higher tariffs are spilling into a broader inflation
problem.”

In cryptocurrencies, bitcoin fell 2.6% to $115,644, while
Ether was down 3.3% at $3,616.

(Reuters)

Only the headline is edited by Shafaq News Agency.


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