NEW YORK: The US dollar headed for its steepest weekly drop in four months on Thursday as investors bet on further monetary easing, amid pressure from President Donald Trump to cut rates.
The yen edged 0.10 percent higher to 156.33 per dollar, helped by a hawkish turn in tone from Bank of Japan officials.
US markets are shut for Thanksgiving, leaving liquidity thin and amplifying trading moves.
“That could be an attractive environment for Japanese authorities to intervene in dollar/yen,” said Francesco Pesole, forex strategist at ING.
“However, there may still be a preference to intervene after a dollar-negative data event, and the stall in the pair may have removed some sense of urgency,” he added.
The US dollar index was up 0.05 percent at 99.58, having retreated from a six-month high hit a week ago to head for its largest weekly drop since July. It is currently down 0.60 percent on a weekly basis.
Mark Haefele, chief investment officer at UBS Global Wealth Management, urged investors to review their currency allocations as the appeal of the US dollar fades, recommending the euro and Australian dollar over the greenback.
If White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett - an advocate for rate cuts - is appointed the next Federal Reserve chair, it ought to be a negative catalyst for the dollar, investors said.
Views on the dollar’s outlook remain divided.
“We’ve gone through a period where rate differentials and euro growth expectations clearly benefited Europe over the US,” said Themos Fiotakis, global head of forex strategy at Barclays.
“Looking ahead, some of those assumptions are being challenged. The euro’s expensiveness is one reason, but the robustness and resilience of the US economy is another,” he added.
The euro dropped 0.05 percent to USD1.1596, after hitting a 1 1/2-week high earlier in the session at USD1.1613.
Markets are watching negotiations over a possible Ukraine peace deal, which could lift the single currency.
President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday that the outlines of a draft peace plan discussed by the United States and Ukraine could become the basis of future agreements to end the conflict in Ukraine but that if not then Russia would continue to fight.
An agreement would instead weigh on the Swiss franc given its role as a geopolitical safe haven, but analysts say there is little sign of a ‘peace dividend’ yet as uncertainty remains high.
The dollar hit a one-week low against the Swiss franc at 0.8028, and was last up 0.16 percent at 0.8056.
A resurgent New Zealand dollar skipped out to a three-week peak of USD0.5728 and has gained about 2 percent since a hawkish shift at the central bank a day earlier.