Dollar clings to two-month peak as Fed rate-hike bets mount, yen slides

Dollar clings to two-month peak as Fed rate-hike bets mount, yen slides
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Summary Dollar held near a two-month high as Fed hike bets rose and Gulf tensions persisted. Yen neared intervention levels, while major currencies showed limited gains.

HONG KONG (Reuters) - The U.S. dollar clung to a more than two-month high on Thursday as markets ramped up wagers on Federal Reserve rate ​hikes this year, heaping fresh pressure on the Japanese yen toward intervention ‌territory.

The U.S. central bank held rates steady in a 3.50%-3.75% range as new chair Kevin Warsh opened the new era with a sweeping policy review, opens new tab. Nearly half of policymakers, however, now expect a ​hike, opens new tab this year on mounting inflation concerns.

The Fed funds futures market has ​now priced in an 83% chance of Fed tightening in December, according ⁠to CME FedWatch, with a strong retail sales reading further adding to hawkish bets.

Fresh ​Gulf uncertainties continued to sap risk appetite after U.S. President Donald Trump said he ​could resume attacks if Iran violates the ceasefire agreement, keeping oil prices elevated and the dollar supported. Iran's leaders did not address the new threats.

The euro last traded a shade stronger at $1.1511 and sterling ​strengthened to $1.3318 , after touching the currencies touched two-month lows earlier.

The risk-sensitive Australian dollar ​and the New Zealand dollar were both up roughly 0.2% to $0.7025 and $0.5780, respectively.

The dollar index , which ‌measures ⁠the greenback against a basket of currencies including the yen and the euro, was little changed at 100.31.

It surged 0.85% to the strongest level since March 31 in the previous session, in its biggest single-day gain since March 2,

"The dollar is ​up making some sizable ​gains... this is ⁠going to take a little while to shrug off," NAB's senior markets strategist Gavin Friend said in a podcast. "It looks like ​we could be pushing into new territory here for the ​dollar."

The Japanese ⁠yen weakened to as much as 160.760 after hitting its weakest since 2024 overnight, continuing to hover around the 160 level widely seen as a line in the sand ⁠for ​potential official intervention.

Elsewhere, the Bank of England looks ​on course to keep interest rates unchanged at 3.75% later on Thursday as it assesses what a tentative truce ​in the Iran war means for inflation.

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