The dollar records more losses after US inflation data

The dollar recorded more losses once morest other major currencies on Thursday, following traders reduced their bets that the Federal Reserve (the US central bank) will raise interest rates strongly following US inflation data that came the previous day, weaker than expected. And the dollar index, which measures the performance of the green currency once morest a basket of currencies, remained low in the early hours of European trading, following it recorded its largest daily decline in five months, reaching one percent the previous day. Data released on Wednesday showed that US consumer prices were unchanged on a monthly basis in July following rising 1.3 percent in June. “Yesterday’s data gave hopes that inflation has peaked and the Federal Reserve will need to moderate its rate hikes to keep inflation in check,” currency analysts at German Commercial Bank said in a note. Traders have scaled back bets that the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates by 75 basis points for the third consecutive time at its September policy meeting, and now see a half-point increase in interest rates as the most likely option. The euro rose a quarter of a percentage point to $1.03255. The yen rose 0.2 percent to 132.615 per dollar. Sterling broadly stabilized at $1.22250, following gaining more than 1% the day before.

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