Dollar Mostly Subdued Against Major Counterparts

RTTNews | 751 days ago
Dollar Mostly Subdued Against Major Counterparts

(RTTNews) - The U.S. dollar turned in a weak performance against its major counterparts on Wednesday despite the Federal Reserve forecasting additional increases later this year.

The Fed maintained the target range for the federal funds rate at 5 to 5.25%, marking the first time the central bank has left rates unchanged since January 2022.

Leaving rates unchanged will allow the Federal Open Market Committee the opportunity to assess additional information and its implications for monetary policy, the Fed said.

However, the central bank's latest projections suggest the Fed plans to resume raising rates later this year, forecasting a rate of 5.6% by the end of 2023.

The forecast for additional rate hikes this year comes as the Fed raised its forecast for annual core consumer price growth to 3.9% from 3.6%.

In economic releases today, the Labor Department said its producer price index for final demand fell by 0.3% in May after inching up by 0.2% in April. Economists had expected producer prices to edge down by 0.1%.

The report also showed the annual rate of producer price growth slowed to 1.1% in May from 2.3% in April. The rate of growth was expected to decelerate to 1.5%.

Meanwhile, the European Central Bank is expected to raise interest rates by 25 basis points on Thursday despite deepening fears of a recession in Europe.

The dollar index, which dropped to 102.66 ahead of the Fed's policy statement, recovered to around 103.25 later before easing to 103.02.

Against the Euro, the dollar weakened to 1.0834, from 1.0796, and against Pound Sterling, dropped to 1.2665 from 1.2615.

The dollar eased to 140.09 yen from 140.20 yen. Against the Aussie, it weakened to 0.6795. Against Swiss franc, the dollar weakened to around CHF 0.8965 before recovering to 0.9011. The dollar settled at C$1.3327 against the loonie, up slightly from the previous close of C$1.3316.

read more
TSX Settles Roughly Flat

TSX Settles Roughly Flat

The Canadian stock market ended flat on Friday, amid uncertainty on US-Canada trade deal even as July 9 deadline set by the US President for tariff agreement is fast approaching.
RTTNews | 12h 49min ago
Swiss Market Ends Slightly Down

Swiss Market Ends Slightly Down

After languishing in negative territory till a little before the final hour of the day's trading session, the Switzerland market managed to emerge into positive zone on Friday but failed to hold firm and eventually settled with a marginal loss.
RTTNews | 19h 32min ago
TSX Up Marginally After Posting New Record High

TSX Up Marginally After Posting New Record High

The Canadian market is up marginally a little past noon on Friday with investors largely making cautious moves on weak private sector activity report, and amid uncertainty about Trump administration's tariff moves.
RTTNews | 21h 1min ago
German Factory Orders Log Bigger-Than-Expected Fall

German Factory Orders Log Bigger-Than-Expected Fall

Germany's factory orders declined more than expected in May on falling demand from both the domestic market and other euro area economies, official data revealed on Friday. Factory orders decreased 1.4 percent from a month ago, Destatis reported. Orders were expected to drop 0.2 percent after an upwardly revised 1.6 percent rise in April. Orders declined for the first time in four months.
RTTNews | 1 day ago
Bay Street Headed For Weak Start

Bay Street Headed For Weak Start

Canadian shares are likely to open on a negative note Friday morning, tracking weak European stocks and lower crude oil prices. Concerns about tariffs may weigh down on sentiment. Trading volumes are likely to remain thin as the U.S. market is closed for Independence Day holiday.
RTTNews | 1 day ago
UK Construction Sector Contraction Slowest In 6 Months

UK Construction Sector Contraction Slowest In 6 Months

UK construction activity declined at the slowest pace since the current period of contraction began in January, survey results from S&P Global showed on Friday. The headline construction Purchasing Managers' Index rose to 48.8 in June from 47.9 in May. The expected score was 48.6. Any reading below 50.0 indicates an overall reduction in construction activity.
RTTNews | 1 day ago