News: FOREX-Dollar wavers as traders tire of 'headline ping-pong'

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    • Dollar's Trump bump runs out of puff
    • Kiwi hits 4-month high as rate-cut expectations ebb
    • Graphic: World FX rates in 2019 http://tmsnrt.rs/2egbfVh

    The dollar wobbled on Thursday as an earlier boost from upbeat trade comments by U.S. President Donald Trump ran out of steam and investors remained on edge over Sino-U.S. tensions.

    In a fillip to sentiment overnight, Trump said talks to resolve the damaging trade war with China were going "very well". Bloomberg also reported that the two sides are moving closer to an agreement, citing people familiar with the talks.

    However, with no official reassurance from the Chinese on Thursday, and only a day after Trump said a deal might not come until after the 2020 presidential election, the recovery promptly stalled in Asian trade.

    "It's too soon to say whether it's a rebound or a dead-cat bounce, that's the way I look at risk at the moment," said Matt Simpson, a senior market analyst at Gain Capital in Singapore.

    Movements in major currencies were modest. The safe-haven Japanese yen JPY= steadied at 108.84 per dollar, while the Swiss franc CHF= inched higher to 0.9879 per dollar.

    The euro EUR= firmed marginally against the dollar to $1.1084, which pushed the greenback down 0.1% against a basket of currencies .DXY to 97.551.

    The British pound crept back to the eight-month high hit overnight as expectations firmed that Prime Minister Boris Johnson would win a majority at next week's election.

    The focus remained on trade news, or the lack of it, with investors also looking ahead to non-farm payrolls data on Friday as a possible source of further disappointment with the state of the U.S. economy.

    "I thought the markets had stopped playing headline ping- pong on trade, but evidently not," said National Australia Bank's head FX strategist, Ray Attrill. "Another day, another reversal of what happened the previous day."

    TRANS-TASMAN DIVERGENCE Elsewhere, domestic factors moved the Antipodean currencies in opposite directions.

    The Australian dollar AUD=D3 slipped 0.2% to $0.6838 after softer-than-expected retail sales data.

    The kiwi NZD= climbed by the same margin to a four-month high, after softer-than-expected banking reforms led to a reduction in rate-cut expectations.

    The Reserve Bank of New Zealand lifted bank capital requirements, but not as much as some investors had feared. The long implementation time has also reduced expectations that monetary easing might be needed to offset the hike's tightening effects.

    "A softening in the proposals, combined with a more positive domestic outlook...mean we are changing our Official Cash Rate (OCR) call to only one further 25bp OCR cut, in May next year, taking the OCR to 0.75%," ANZ analysts said in an emailed note.

    The kiwi added 0.4% to $0.6555, its highest since August, and has put on more than a cent this week as business sentiment there has rebounded as well.

    Against the Aussie, the kiwi has gained about 3% in a month to stand at a four-month high of NZ$1.0457 per A$1 AUDNZD= .

    The Canadian dollar CAD=D3 hit a one-month high of $1.3203 per greenback after the country's central bank held interest rates steady and said there were signs the global economy was stabilising.

    A rise in oil prices also supported the exporter's currency, and lifted the Norwegian krone NOK= slightly to 9.1643 per dollar.

 
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