Dollar drops against peers after delayed US data shows jobs growth

NEW YORK, Dec 16 : The U.S. dollar fell against major peers on Tuesday after the release of delayed economic data showing stronger-than-expected jobs growth, signalling that the Federal Reserve might be cautious in continuing to cut interest rates in the near term.

The U.S. economy added 64,000 jobs in November, surpassing an estimate from economists polled by Reuters. That came after the economy shed 105,000 jobs in October, according to Labor Department data.

The employment report was delayed because of the 43-day U.S. federal government shutdown. 

The greenback eased against its peers following the data. It was last down 0.26 per cent to 0.79435 against the Swiss franc.

“The data was mixed, there were some good signs in hiring and a little better than expected, but not massively so,” said John Velis, Americas FX and macro strategist at BNY. 

“I think the downside is that the unemployment number increased from 4.4 per cent to 4.6 per cent, which could get the Fed’s eyebrows raised in January,” Velis said.

Fed funds futures are pricing an implied 73.4 per cent probability of a hold in rates at the U.S. central bank’s next meeting on January 28, up from nearly 70 per cent a week ago, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch tool.

“The fact that most of the jobs that were created were in non-cyclical sectors such as healthcare suggests there’s not a lot of cyclical activity picking up. The headline numbers were goodish but the guts of the data were not so great. So the market called it a punt, or kind of even,” Velis added.

The dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of currencies including the yen and the euro, fell 0.22 per cent to 98.05. It is on track for the second straight session of losses.

CENTRAL BANK DECISIONS IN FOCUS

Central bank decisions are in focus this week. The European Central Bank is widely expected to hold interest rates on Thursday.

Economic data out of the euro zone was mixed but supported the ECB’s higher-for-longer policy rate stance and bolstered the euro. Data showed German investor morale rising more than expected in December and euro zone business activity growth slowing at the end of 2025. 

The euro was up 0.3 per cent to $1.1788 against the greenback, touching its highest level since September and on track for the fifth consecutive session of gains.

The Bank of England, on the other hand, looks set for a knife-edge vote on interest rates this week with Governor Andrew Bailey expected to change his view and tip the balance for a cut.

Sterling strengthened 0.39 per cent to $1.3425, hitting its highest level in two months ahead of the BoE’s decision on Thursday.

A rate hike from the Bank of Japan is largely baked in, although any signal that policymakers could tighten again before spring wage talks would mark a hawkish shift.

Big Japanese manufacturers’ business sentiment reached a four-year high in the three months to December, supporting expectations for additional tightening. But analysts said the BoJ’s policy update might fail to support the yen as fiscal concerns weigh.

The dollar dropped 0.38 per cent to 154.615 against the yen ahead of the BoJ’s decision on Friday.

Sweden’s Riksbank and Norway’s Norges Bank are expected to leave interest rates unchanged after their policy meetings this week.

The Swedish crown strengthened 0.09 per cent versus the dollar to 9.287. Against the Norwegian krone,, the dollar strengthened 0.38 per cent to 10.173.

In cryptocurrencies, bitcoin gained 1.14 per cent to $87,212.46, on track to snap four straight sessions of losses. Ether declined 0.51 per cent to $2,929.19.


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