By Gina Lee
Investing.com – The dollar was down on Friday morning in Asia after the U.S. posted higher-than-expected inflation data in May.
The that tracks the greenback against a basket of other currencies edged down 0.11% to 89.980 by 12:14 AM ET (4:14 AM GMT).
The pair inched up 0.08% to 109.40, with a new analysis saying another COVID-19 surge could come in Japan with or without the Olympics.
The pair inched up 0.04% to 0.7755 as Australia is working on a quarantine-free travel corridor with Singapore. Across the Tasman Sea, the pair inched down 0.01% to 0.7195.
The pair edged down 0.10% to 6.3865.
The pair inched up 0.06% to 1.4182. Investors will be monitoring the opening of the in the U.K. on Friday.
In the U.S., data released on Thursday said that the (CPI) jumped 5.0% year-on-year in May, above 4.7% in forecasts and 4.2% growth during the previous session. It posted the sharpest rise in over a dozen years. Its core CPI increased 3.8% and 0.7% in May, both above forecasts prepared by investing.com.
However, investors bet that price pressures are not going to force the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank to hike interest rates sooner than expected due to hefty contributions from short-term rises in airline ticket prices and used cars.
“It basically fit the Fed script, that we’d get a burst but it’s going to be temporary…this report is consistent with that, it doesn’t argue against it. I think the market needed something that argued against it to push the U.S. dollar higher,” Westpac currency analyst Imre Speizer told Reuters.
Investors now await Fed’s meeting next week, although investors are aligning with the Fed’s view that inflationary pressures are temporary and that the central bank will keep its current dovish monetary policy unchanged for a while.
It is expected that the central bank will announce a plan for reducing bond buying, but it isn’t forecast to begin until 2022, according to a Reuters poll of economists.
“What we’re seeing is a market that believes in the Fed…we’re going to get tapering…But it’s going to get done a such a snail’s pace.” Chris Weston, head of research at broker Pepperstone, told Reuters.
Across the Atlantic, the European Central Bank president Christine Lagarde on Thursday pledged to deliver faster bond buying.
“A sustained rise in market rates could translate into a tightening of wider financing conditions… such a tightening would be premature and would pose a risk to the ongoing economic recovery,” Lagarde said.
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