Tuesday, 29 April 2025

Dollar slides as lower U.S. yields give markets a breather

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The dollar slid on Tuesday as U.S. treasury yields paused in a relentless climb higher, providing brief relief to share markets and helping the euro and sterling move further off multi-year lows, Reuters reported.
The Australian dollar was also in focus, sinking about 1% after the nation’s central bank surprised markets with a smaller-than-expected interest rate hike, before recovering and catching onto the broad recovery in risk sentiment.
The euro EUR=EBS was last up 0.5% at $0.9876, a moderate recovery from its 20-year low of $0.9528 on Sept. 26, while sterling GBP=D3 was up 0.6% at $1.1390, off a record low of $1.0327 the same day.
A calmer British government bond market was also a relief for the pound after recent government-inspired turmoil.
In a statement on Monday, the Bank of England reaffirmed its willingness to buy long-dated gilts and the head of Britain’s debt management office, overseeing the bond market, told Reuters in an interview the market was resilient.
“The pullback by the U.S dollar has coincided with a sharp correction lower for U.S. yields,” MUFG analysts said in a note to clients, adding that the two moves had “brought some much-needed relief for risk assets and high-beta currencies.”
MUFG flagged the New Zealand dollar NZD=D3 up 2.6% since the start of the week and Norwegian crown NOK=D3, up 3%, as particular beneficiaries.
The moves in the dollar and yields appear to partially reflect market participants’ greater comfort that the Fed is moving closer to the end of its rate hike cycle, they said.
“Market expectations for the Fed’s terminal policy rate for next year have come down from around 4.75% to 4.39%,” they added.
The benchmark 10-year Treasury yield US10YT=RR was at 3.5677%, down sharply from last week when it briefly poked above 4%.

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