Economic news

Dollar Back Under Pressure, Safe Havens Outperform

  • Yen climbs into U.S.-Japan trade talks
  • Swiss franc continues to post gains on dollar
  • Bank of Canada meeting eyed, 40% chance of a rate cut

SINGAPORE/LONDON, April 16 (Reuters) - The dollar resumed its descent on Wednesday, dropping across the board and losing the most ground to the Swiss franc and the euro as a new bout of tariff-induced nerves gripped markets.

The dollar has been a casualty of shaken confidence in the United States as radical tariffs have been threatened, enforced and then partially postponed over a wild few weeks for world trade and markets.

While it managed to find its footing earlier this week - even eking out small gains on Tuesday - by Wednesday, European trading of the U.S. currency was headed back towards last week's lows.

The latest jitters follow a U.S. decision to impose restrictions on chip exports to China, and President Donald Trump's launch of a probe into whether critical minerals should face tariffs.

The dollar was last down 1.2% on the Swiss franc at 0.8137 francs, just slightly above Friday's 10-year low and was also 0.8% lower against the Japanese yen at 142.1, a seven-month low.

The franc has appreciated the most amongst G10 currencies since the April 2 tariff announcement, and the resulting disinflationary effect could push the Swiss National Bank to bring rates back into negative territory

The SNB often intervenes directly in markets to limit the franc's moves, though given Trump's concern over such action, there would be risk of blowback.

And market speculation the SNB may not intervene could also make traders feel more confident about buying the franc, said Chris Turner, global head of markets at ING.

"I'm sure the SNB would say that their hands aren't tied, but I think investors might be second guessing that," he said.

The franc playing its traditional role of gaining at times of market stress along with the broader outperformance by European currencies were the primary drivers of its current strength, Turner added.

The euro has gained around 5% since tariffs were announced, benefiting as European investors pare back their massive allocations to U.S. assets.

While it saw a small pullback this week from a three-year high of $1.1474, it was up another 0.9% on Thursday at $1.1382.

Traders were also keeping an eye on talks between Japan's economy minister Ryosei Akazawa and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, as there is speculation the countries agree on a stronger yen.

Positioning, however, as of last week's data, showed the largest net yen long on record stretching back to 1986, meaning there could be a heavy reversal if there are signs the talks do not go well.

Also still to come are U.S. retail sales, an appearance from U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell and a Bank of Canada meeting where markets are uncertain whether policymakers will cut or hold interest rates.

The Canadian dollar , a touch stronger on the day at C$1.3917 per greenback and up 4% in April, is one of the starkest examples of how heavily investors have punished the dollar due to concern over erratic policymaking and a potential U.S. recession.

A rate cut is priced at about a 40% chance.

Britain's pound largely looked beyond cooler than expected inflation data and was last at $1.328, up 0.36% around six-month highs.

The Australian and New Zealand dollars, which last week notched their largest weekly rises since 2020, were a little off recent peaks but holding the high ground with the Aussie at $0.6345 and the kiwi at $0.5913.

Markets made little immediate reaction to strong first-quarter growth and activity indicators from China.

The yuan slipped against the dollar on Wednesday, tracking a slight nudge weaker in the trading band, and was last at 7.3235 per dollar onshore. Offshore it was flat on the day at 7.3277 per dollar.

China has weakened the trading band of the yuan only slightly since the onslaught of tariffs that have topped 100%

Reporting by Tom Westbrook; Editing by Shri Navaratnam, Jacqueline Wong and Joe Bavier

Source: Reuters


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