Forex news

The U.S. dollar is up 1.7% for the 2021 year

The U.S. dollar is rising for a fifth straight daily increase. Confidence in the United States economic outlook and the possibility that Friday’s jobs report might be stronger than anticipated made the increase possible.

The dollar index increased by 0.48% in New York morning trading and stood at 91.507, its highest level in two months. Furthermore, it was up 1.7% for the 2021 year.

The euro declined by 0.54% and traded at $1.197, below what had seemed a resistance level of $1.20 earlier this week. The euro fell below $1.20 for the first time since December 1.

The American currency boosted by 0.4% versus the yen. It was trading at 105.46, the highest level since November 11.

After the U.S. dollar index declined by 7% in 2020, its gains since December sign that the U.S. economy’s rebound from the COVID-19 pandemic will be relatively stronger than other countries.

According to senior market analysts at OANDA, there’s a fundamental change in the short term. We are viewing the U.S. economic outlook as overpowering what we see in the eurozone.

Related Post

The dollar’s move was supported by U.S. Treasury yields increase

That view became stronger on February 4 when the U.S. government announced the number of Americans filing new applications for unemployment benefits declined last week. Initial applications for state unemployment benefits totaled a seasonally adjusted 779,000 last week. It was better than economists had anticipated and better than 812,000 in the previous week.

Longer-term U.S. Treasury yields saw an increase; hence it supported the U.S. dollar’s move. Meantime, investors positioned for a large pandemic relief package from Washington and a stabilizing U.S. labor market.

Furthermore, the benchmark 10-year yield increased by 1.5 basis points in morning trading. It stood at 1.1461% and at one point hit 1.16%, its highest level unseen since January 12.

The British pound declined as much as 0.5%. The currency saw a decline ahead of scheduled comments by the Bank of England about the possibility of negative interest rates. Significantly, after the central bank announcement, it recovered and traded up 0.12%.

The Bank of England announced that it would ask banks to get ready for the possibility of negative rates. However, that financial markets should not view sub-zero borrowing costs as a foregone conclusion. Britain’s economy is likely to decline by 4% for the first quarter of 2021. The banks said that it should recover rapidly toward pre-corona levels over the year.

According to a portfolio manager at Legal & General, Justin Onuekwusi, if Europe continues slowness in rollout coronavirus vaccine, we will see the gap widen between euro and dollar.

User Review
0 (0 votes)

Recent Posts

  • Technology News

Tesla Withdraws Next-Gen Gigacasting Manufacturing Process

Tesla has reportedly retreated from its ambitious plan for innovations in gigacasting its developing manufacturing…

15 hours ago
  • Broker News

Dukascopy Sees Dip in 2023 Profits, Netting CHF 1.3 Million

Dukascopy Bank SA noted a net profit of CHF 1.3 million last year amidst market…

16 hours ago
  • Commodity News

Cocoa Crashes as Traders Delay Purchases from West Africa

On Wednesday, cocoa prices plunged after a liquidity crunch forced traders and speculators to postpone…

18 hours ago
  • Stock News

Woolworths Stock Hits 4-Year Low on Cautious Customer Buying

Shares in Woolworths Group Ltd. hit a four-year low on Thursday as the Australian grocer…

20 hours ago
  • Stock News

Financial Markets in October: Dow Up, S&P and Nasdaq Down

Quick Overview Dow Jones increased by 0.23%, while S&P 500 and Nasdaq saw declines, reflecting…

2 days ago
  • Technology News

Amazon Expands AI Enterprise with Chatbot Q Launch

Amazon has expanded its artificial intelligence (AI) enterprise with the launch of its chatbot Q,…

2 days ago

This website uses cookies.