European stock markets fell slightly, with London's benchmark FTSE 100 index down 0.3 percent approaching midday, as traders digested regional economic data.
"Most of the morning's movement came on the forex market, with investors focused on the UK retail sales and eurozone inflation readings," said Connor Campbell, analyst at traders Spreadex.
"Looking to the US open and the Dow Jones is set to match Europe's relatively mild losses" on stock markets, he added.
British official retail sales rose in July, slightly beating expectations, even though household incomes are still feeling the squeeze from a Brexit-fuelled slump in the pound.
Eurozone inflation was confirmed at 1.3 percent in July.
In Japan, the Nikkei ended marginally down with automakers and banks in retreat, with Japanese shares dragged lower in part by a firm yen.
Traders reacted to news that some members of the US central bank argued it could afford to "be patient" before raising rates again amid persistent weak US inflation.
"US dollar weakness followed the release of minutes that indicated 'many' members feared inflation will stay lower for longer," said Michael McCarthy, chief market strategist at CMC Markets.
Wall Street on Wednesday shrugged off developments in Washington to rise above 22,000 points, even as US President Donald Trump disbanded a pair of business advisory boards after several chief executives resigned over his widely criticised response to a white supremacist rally in Charlottesville.
"If you thought the president lacked the necessary key back room operators to implement the White House economic agenda, well things just got worse," said Oanda analyst Stephen Innes.
"Predictably the dollar sagged, and safe havens (such as the yen) were back in vogue."
Investors are now awaiting the latest European Central Bank minutes due later Thursday. Policymakers have signalled they are considering phasing out stimulus measures as the eurozone economy gathers pace.
On commodities markets, crude prices steadied following a sharp decline overnight after official data showed US production climbed to the highest level in more than two years, heightening worries about a supply glut.