The US Dollar clawed its way higher in Asia Pacific after yesterday’s fourth consecutive daily loss amid ebbing worries about concerns about political instability in Italy and Spain. The greenback retreated from an 11-month high after Rome took a step back from the brink and Madrid seemed to manage a relatively orderly removal of long-serving Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy.
It wouldn’t be long before the subsequent recovery in risk appetite reminded yield-seeking investors about where the Fed’s uniquely hawkish position in the G10 FX pecking order, however, as expected. The second half of Monday’s session saw the US unit tracking higher alongside front-end Treasury bond yields while the priced-in 2019 rate hike outlook steepened and gold prices fell.
More of the same may be on tap as investors look beyond a lackluster European calendar to focus on May’s non-manufacturing ISM survey. It is expected to show that the pace of service-sector activity growth sped up last month after three months of deceleration. Analogous Markit PMI data hints the rebound may be more pronounced than analysts project, which may offer USD a further upward push.
Meanwhile, the Australian Dollar underperformed, losing ground against all of its major counterparts as the prices retraced some of the prior day’s outsized advance. A status-quo RBA monetary policy announcement contributed somewhat to selling pressure, but most of the currency’s losses were registered before it crossed the wires.
ASIA PACIFIC TRADING SESSION

EUROPEAN TRADING SESSION

** All times listed in GMT. See the full economic calendar here.




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