U.S. dollar stands tall after Fed signals no rush to cut rates
The U.S. dollar climbed against major peers on Friday following its best single-day performance for three weeks with the Federal Reserve indicating no rush to cut interest rates.
The risk-sensitive Australian and New Zealand dollars edged further down after steep slides on Thursday as worries about the economic drag from U.S. President Donald Trump's aggressive campaign of global trade tariffs dented sentiment.
The dollar index measure against a basket of six counterparts was 0.21% higher at 104.01 as of 0436 GMT, after strengthening 0.36% on Thursday.
The index plumbed a five-month low at 103.19 this week following a steady decline from the highest since late 2022 at 110.17 on January 13 as hopes for expansive policies under Trump gave way to anxiety that the global trade war he started could trigger a U.S. recession.
Fed policymakers held rates steady on Wednesday and signaled two quarter-point cuts for later this year, the same median forecast as three months ago.
"We're not going to be in any hurry to move," Fed Chair Jerome Powell said, underscoring the challenge policymakers face in navigating Trump's erratic tariffs, and the potential impact on the domestic economy.
A new round of reciprocal levies is expected on April 2.
The euro , which has by far the heaviest weighting in the dollar index, slipped 0.18% to $1.0831 after dropping 0.45% on Thursday.
Sterling eased 0.19% to $1.2943.
The dollar added 0.42% to 149.40 yen .
On Wednesday, the Bank of Japan refrained from raising rates again, and warned of heightening economic uncertainty in the wake of ramped-up U.S. tariffs on trading partners.
The Antipodean currencies, which are not part of the dollar index, suffered larger losses on Thursday.
The Aussie weakened 0.21% to $0.6290 following a 0.86% slump on Thursday.
Source: Reuters