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By

NEW YORK: The dollar regained ground against the yen, recovering from Monday’s selloff, even as expectations for a December rate hike by the Bank of Japan lingered, while the euro edged up after data on Tuesday showed euro zone inflation was slightly hotter-than-expected.

The greenback rose 0.3 percent against the yen to 156.00, after hitting a two-week low on Monday, following a sale of 10-year Japanese government bonds which saw the strongest demand since September.

“The auction result appears to have provided a measure of reassurance to the market,” said Shoki Omori, chief desk strategist at Mizuho in Tokyo.

Stocks, bonds, cryptocurrencies and the dollar all tumbled on Monday after Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda said that the central bank would consider the “pros and cons” of raising interest rates at its next policy meeting, sending Japanese two-year yields above 1 percent for the first time since 2008 and prompting a spillover into global bond markets.

“We’re basically back to where we started before Ueda’s remarks yesterday, which is maybe a bit perplexing considering that swaps still price about an 80 percent chance of a Dec hike,” said Michael Brown, senior research strategist at Pepperstone.

“To me it speaks to everything still being very much USD-driven, with the pressure on the buck seen yesterday amid increasing expectations that (Kevin)

Hassett

will get the Fed Chair gig having given way to slightly more rational conditions today, as participants re-focus on what remains a solid US growth outlook, even with a 25-basis-point Fed cut next week very much on the cards,” he said.

Data on Monday showed weaker-than-expected manufacturing data from the US, heaping pressure on the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates this month.

Fed funds futures are pricing an 87 percent probability of a 25-basis-point cut at the Fed’s next meeting on December 10, compared with a 63 percent chance a month ago, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch tool.

The euro was 0.1 percent higher at USD1.16200 after data showed Inflation in the 20 nations sharing the euro accelerated to 2.2 percent last month from 2.1 percent in October, a small rise that is unlikely to be too concerning for the European Central Bank. Inflation in the euro zone is practically at the ECB’s 2 percent target, ECB policymaker Joachim Nagel said in an interview published on Tuesday.

“This (inflation data) comes at a time where some had claimed we could yet see another cut from the ECB, although the likeliness is that their easing cycle is over,” said Joshua Mahony, chief market analyst at Scope Markets. Sterling edged 0.1 percent lower to USD1.3207, having touched its highest level in a month on Monday.

The Bank of England cut the amount of capital it estimates lenders need to hold in a bid to boost lending and stimulate the economy in the first reduction to bank capital requirements since the financial crisis.

Leading cryptocurrency bitcoin rose 2 percent to USD88,255, pulling away from the 10-day low touched in the previous session.

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