FOREX-Dollar regains footing as investors eye lockdown risks

Published 07/07/2020, 03:36 pm
Updated 07/07/2020, 03:42 pm
© Reuters.
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* Dollar index steady after slide

* Yuan kiwi hold gains but worry halts rise

* Aussie a tad lower as Melbourne faces lockdown

* Graphic: World FX rates in 2020 https://tmsnrt.rs/2RBWI5E

By Tom Westbrook

SINGAPORE, July 7 (Reuters) - The dollar found some traction on Tuesday, as risks from rising coronavirus cases offset strong economic data and kept a lid on confidence in an economic recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic.

Following a Monday slide, the greenback was steady on most majors and clung on near a two-week low against a basket of currencies USD= .DXY , tracking the mood in equity markets.

The Australian dollar AUD=D3 pulled back from a one-month high after the country's second-most populous state announced six weeks of stay-at-home restrictions and a lockdown for the city of Melbourne to curb rising cases. Aussie was unmoved after Australia's central bank held the country's benchmark interest rate at a record low 0.25%, as expected, and said it would maintain its accommodative approach for as long as required. Chinese yuan CNH= picked up where it left off after soaring with runaway Chinese equities on Monday, but pulled back from an offshore top of 6.9965 per dollar as caution crept in.

Investors are watching nervously as infections surge in the United States and India, but are so far taking the view that more massive lockdowns are unlikely.

The daily case count makes grave reading, but deaths have not jumped, said Chris Weston, head of research at Melbourne brokerage Pepperstone, who is more closely watching the bond market where stubbornly low yields are driving cash elsewhere.

The yield on benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasuries US10YT=RR has been parked at roughly 0.7% for a month, well below an early June top of 0.9590% and more than 100 basis points below where they began the year. US/

"If we were to suddenly see signs of a sell-off in the Treasury market, that could have big implications for where global capital sits. Until that point, it's onwards and upwards," Weston said. "Just do what's working and carry on buying."

Since April, that has been commodity currencies led among the G10 by the Aussie. It has gained 14%, the Norwegian krone NOK= 11%, the kiwi NZD=D3 10% and the Swedish krona 8%.

On Tuesday, the kiwi last sat steady at $0.6554 having, like the Aussie, pulled back from testing the top of a range it has kept for about a month. AUD/

The euro EUR= sat just below a two-week high touched on Monday at $1.1311 and the pound GBP= held steady at $1.2505. The yen JPY= was flat at 107.36 per dollar.

"The worst is likely over, but a swift and steady recovery cannot be taken as the base case," said Terence Wu, a strategist at Singapore's OCBC Bank, in an outlook note expecting dollar weakness to persist, but with risks if lockdowns resumed.

HEALTHY BULLS

Monday's surge in sentiment came after a front-page editorial in the China Securities Journal, affiliated with state-run Xinhua, said fundamentals laid the foundation for a "healthy bull market". also showed U.S. service industry activity rebounded to almost pre-pandemic levels last month, with the headline figure of 57.1 well ahead of expectations around 50.2. are looking for a rebound in German industrial output data due at 0600 GMT and expect a slight dip in U.S. job openings at 1400 GMT in the latest economic updates.

Meanwhile, the rapid spread of the coronavirus has given some pause for thought.

Florida's greater Miami area became the latest hot spot to roll back its reopening as virus cases surged nationwide by the tens of thousands and the U.S. death toll topped 130,000. will shut the border between its two most populous states at one minute before midnight on Tuesday, as it attempts to contain an outbreak in the city of Melbourne. dollar index is firmly ensconced in a 96-98 range," National Australia Bank analysts said in a note. "It will need a major shift in risk sentiment one way or the other to see either edge tested." (Editing by Shri Navaratnam and Jacqueline Wong)

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