Dollar on backfoot ahead of payrolls data even as trade talks go on
The U.S. dollar ceded ground to the Swiss franc, Australian dollar, euro and yen on Friday as signs of a thaw in trade tensions lifted investors' appetite for riskier assets while they awaited U.S. jobs data due later in the day.
The risk-sensitive Aussie and kiwi dollars climbed as European and Asian shares continued a rally that began on Wall Street against the backdrop of updates from China and Japan on tariff discussions with the Donald Trump administration.
The euro was up 0.3% and China's offshore yuan strengthened to a near one-month high.
The U.S. dollar was still on track for a third straight weekly advance. Alongside U.S. Treasuries and shares, it has bounced from steep declines last month as President Donald Trump's erratic tariff policies drove fears of a recession and sapped confidence in U.S. assets.
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio told Fox News late on Thursday that talks with China will come up soon. His comments came on the heels of a Chinese state media report seen as a signal of Beijing's openness to trade negotiations.
Beijing is "evaluating" an offer from Washington to hold talks over Trump's tariffs, China's Commerce Ministry said on Friday.
Separately, Japan's top trade negotiator, Ryosei Akazawa, said he deepened talks on trade, non-tariff measures and economic security cooperation with U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent in Washington on Thursday.
And Finance Minister Katsunobu Kato said Japan could use its $1 trillion-plus holdings of U.S. Treasuries as leverage in trade talks with Washington.
U.S. stocks rose on Thursday, driven by positive tech earnings and a slightly better-than-expected manufacturing report even though it showed factory activity contracted further last month.
The dollar index dipped 0.23% on Friday, still poised for a 0.3% gain in a week of relatively light trading due to holidays. The euro edged up 0.33% to $1.1329 from near a three-week low.
The Australian dollar rose 0.55% to $0.6418, and the Swiss franc added 0.3% to 0.8265 per U.S. dollar.
The greenback traded at 144.875 yen , after earlier touching 145.91, the strongest since April 10. The yen sank on Thursday after the Bank of Japan left interest rates on hold and lowered growth forecasts due to U.S. tariffs, essentially signalling a pause in rate hikes for more clarity on the fallout from the trade measures.
Market participants are now looking to the non-farm payrolls (NFP) report for an indication on when the Federal Reserve will resume cutting rates. Wall Street economists are forecasting 130,000 new jobs created last month, compared with a print of 228,000 seen in March.
Societe Generale's Broux said a number far from the consensus would actually be better, helping clarify whether the U.S. was heading for a recession, which would mean more Fed rate cuts, or would avoid a sharp slowdown.
Source : Reuters