Dollar, Euro Up as Macron Lead Boosts European Currency By




By Gina Lee

Investing.com – The dollar was up on Monday morning in Asia, with the euro starting the week off strong as incumbent Emmanuel Macron led in the first round of voting in the French presidential election. Other moves were small as investors await central bank policy decisions in Europe, Canada, New Zealand, and South Korea.

The that tracks the greenback against a basket of other currencies edged up 0.13% to 99.882 by 11:27 PM ET (3:27 AM GMT).

The pair was up 0.45% to 124.88.

The pair edged down 0.18% to 0.7441 and the pair was down 0.22% to 0.6829.

The pair inched up 0.10% to 6.3717. released earlier in the day showed that the consumer price index grew 0% and 1.5% in March. The grew 8.3%.

The pair edged down 0.11% to 1.3016.

The euro briefly climbed as high as $1.0955 amid thin trading at the Asian session open, before settling about 0.15% higher than Friday’s close at $1.0890. The single currency also gained against the pound and the yen.

With 88% of votes counted, Macron garnered 27.41% and his far-right challenger Marine Le Pen was next with 24.9%, with the pair next contesting a runoff vote on Apr. 24. Macron’s strong start gave some confidence to markets that are wary about Le Pen’s protectionism, even as she no longer backs discontinuing the euro.

However, gains were capped as investors await the policy decision, due on Thursday.

“It’s a patchy bit of support,” Westpac strategist Imre Speizer told Reuters, with investors also grappling with an ECB unlikely to sound as aggressive as Federal Reserve in heading off inflation.

“I think that the biggest story of the two central banks being quite different is probably quite supportive of the dollar in the longer run,” he added.

The dollar index topped the 100-mark for the first time in nearly two years on Friday but fell back down during the Asian session.

The ECB has been in the unenviable position of balancing rising inflation against the pressure on economic growth from the war in Ukraine as it prepares to hand down its policy decision on Thursday. Although the central bank is widely expected to provide more details about a winddown in asset purchases, it may not give any further explicitly hawkish signals.

The and the will hand down their policy decisions on Wednesday. Interest rate swaps pricing indicates a more than 90% chance that both central banks hike interest rates by 50 basis points. However, this leaves the Canadian and New Zealand dollars vulnerable should the hikes be smaller.

The New Zealand dollar wobbled downward on Monday, while the Canadian dollar held steady at C$1.2583 against its U.S. counterpart.

The will also hand down its policy decision on Thursday.

Meanwhile, the Australian dollar also eased, with gains in commodity currencies beginning a further retreat as export prices fall.



Read More: Dollar, Euro Up as Macron Lead Boosts European Currency By

boostscurrencyDollareuroEuropeanleadMacron
Comments (0)
Add Comment