NEW YORK: The US dollar drifted higher against major currencies on Friday after falling in recent sessions, but was still set for its third straight weekly drop amid the prospect of interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve next year.
Sterling also eased after data showed the UK economy unexpectedly shrank in the three months to October.
The euro was flat at USD1.1738 after hitting a more than two-month high on Thursday.
The dollar index, which measures the US currency against six others, rose 0.1 percent to 98.39, recovering from a two-month low hit on Thursday but still on track for its third weekly decline with a 0.6 percent fall. For the month of December, the greenback has been 1.1 percent weaker so far.
The index is also down more than 9 percent this year, on pace for its steepest annual drop since 2017.
Against the yen, the dollar rose 0.3 percent to 155.98 yen ahead of next week’s Bank of Japan meeting, where the broad expectation is for a rate hike. Markets are focused on comments from policymakers on how the rate path will look in 2026.
Reuters reported that the BoJ would likely maintain a pledge next week to keep raising interest rates, but stress that the pace of further hikes would depend on how the economy reacts to each increase.
The pound edged down 0.1 percent against the dollar to USD1.3375, but was trading near a seven-week high hit on Thursday, after economic data that was likely to boost expectations for Bank of England interest rate cuts.
Both sterling and the euro are poised for their third straight week of gains against the dollar.
The Fed cut rates as expected this week but comments from Chair Jerome Powell and the accompanying statement were viewed by investors as less hawkish than expected and reinforced dollar-selling momentum.
“That was a neutral cut. Yes, the board is divided and we saw that in the dissents,” said BNY’s Savage. “But it’s not fair to say that the Fed is going to raise rates like what the other central banks are talking about like the ECB (European Central Bank) and RBA (Reserve Bank of Australia).”
Investors face uncertainty over the path of US monetary policy next year as inflation trends and labor market strength remain unclear, with traders pricing in two rate cuts in 2026 in contrast with policymakers who see only one cut next year and one in 2027.
Fed officials who voted against the US central bank’s interest rate cut this week said on Friday they are worried that inflation remains too high to warrant lower borrowing costs, particularly given the lack of recent official data about the pace of price increases.
How monetary policy evolves will hinge on economic data that is still lagging from the impact of the 43-day federal government shutdown in October and November. The US is heading into a midterm-election year that is likely to focus on economic performance, with President Donald Trump urging sharper rate reductions.
Also in the spotlight for markets is the question of who will become the next Fed chair and how that will affect the growing worries about the central bank’s independence under Trump.
Across the Atlantic, sterling slipped on the back of data showing gross domestic product contracted by 0.1 percent in the August-to-October period. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast a flat reading.