US dollar hovers near two-year low
London
THE US dollar fell against a basket of major currencies for a fifth consecutive trading day on Tuesday, approaching its lowest level in two years under pressure from low yields and bleak economic data in the United States.
The US dollar has enjoyed years of gains but the coronavirus pandemic has hit the world's largest economy hard, leaving investors looking for growth opportunities elsewhere.
The US dollar index was last down 0.3 per cent at 92.55, closing in on a two-year low of 92.49.
A fresh rally in tech stocks provided a positive backdrop for markets and subdued demand for the safe-haven US dollar, while a worse than expected reading of the New York Fed's Empire State business conditions index in August also helped traders stick to their bearish convictions for the currency.
Net bearish bets on the greenback rose to their largest since May 2011 last week, and spot trade in recent days suggests the position has only grown further since.
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Real money and leveraged investors preferred to express their negative view on the US dollar via the most traded currency pair in the world - euro/ US dollar - pushing euro longs to a new record high in the week to Aug 11, latest CFTC data showed.
"The dollar weakness is not over, so I would not subscribe to the camp that says it has become a crowded trade," said Neil Jones, head of hedge fund sales at Mizuho.
"There's a sufficient amount of momentum and a positive sentiment as well for the euro, so I would suggest that there is a lot more going on in euro/US dollar."
He said all eyes were on key psychological US$1.20 level versus the euro, with further gains in store if the level is broken.
The US dollar was down 0.2 per cent versus the euro at US$1.1895 and had fallen 0.5 per cent against the Japanese yen to 105.40 , a 1½-week low.
The yield on the 10-year US Treasury bond has drifted back below 0.70 per cent in recent days after rising from a low of 0.50 per cent hit earlier this month.
The greenback also declined 0.5 per cent against the British pound to US$1.3170, its weakest level in nearly two weeks..
Elsewhere, the Chinese yuan firmed to 6.9192 per US dollar in the offshore trading, a level unseen since March 9, despite the Donald Trump administration flagging a further tightening of restrictions against Chinese tech gear maker Huawei. REUTERS
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