US dollar rate index news: The dollar advanced against major currencies on Tuesday after relatively solid data on U.S. manufacturing and construction in June offset a decline in job openings last month to the lowest level in more than two years. While an ISM survey offered a tough assessment of U.S. manufacturing conditions, so-called hard data suggested the sector is shuffling along. Federal Reserve data in June showed factory production rebounded in the second quarter, ending two straight quarterly declines.

COMMERCIAL BREAK
SCROLL TO CONTINUE READING

Meanwhile, U.S. construction spending increased solidly last month and May's data was revised higher, boosted by outlays in both single and multifamily housing projects, the Commerce Department said. In a third data set, the monthly Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey, or JOLTS report from the Labor Department, remained consistent with tight labor market conditions despite the Fed's hefty interest rate hikes to dampen demand.

The dollar initially slid on the reports, but later rebounded. "The net between the slightly more positive ISM and the slightly less favorable JOLTs numbers, you wind up in an environment the market doesn't know what to do," said Steven Ricchiuto, U.S. chief economist at Mizuho Securities USA LLC. "The ISM numbers are really net neutral to slightly more constructive, but the reality is the offset in the JOLTs numbers with the continued high levels of openings in terms of what we got in terms of the quit rate," Ricchiuto added.

Despite the labor market's resilience, workers showed less appetite to seek greener pastures as resignations dropped by 295,000. As a result, the quits rate, viewed as a measure of labor market confidence, fell to 2.4 per cent from 2.6 per cent in May. The dollar index , a measure of the greenback against six major currencies, rose 0.344 per cent to a fresh three-week high. Earlier, the Australian dollar fell sharply after the Reserve Bank of Australia left cash rates unchanged and the yen slid to a three-week low as tweaks by the Bank of Japan to its yield curve control policy continued to weigh on the currency. The yen has swung wildly since Friday, when the BoJ began what may be a slow shift from decades of massive monetary stimulus. The central bank offered to buy 10-year Japanese government bonds at 1.0 per cent in fixed-rate operations instead of the previous rate of 0.5 per cent.

"When you look at all the major central banks, everyone has a firm handle on what the Fed is doing, the ECB and BoE," said Ed Moya, senior market analyst at OANDA in New York. "It's Japan that is really where all the focus is going to shift." The adjustment to Japan's yield curve control policy is going to be the focus for the rest of the year, Moya added. "Everyone is going to be watching all these key levels, such as 1.45, and when will we really get that strong hawkish signal from the BoJ?" Moya said.

The yen weakened 0.75 per cent at 143.35 per dollar. The Australian dollar posted its biggest daily decline since March after the central bank held rates at 4.1 per cent for a second month, saying past hikes were cooling demand but more tightening might be needed to curb inflation. The Aussie fell 1.61 per cent versus the U.S. dollar at $0.661 to wipe out a 0.87 per cent gain in July. Private surveys showed that Asia's factory activity shrank in July, as the region's fragile recovery takes a hit from slowing global growth and weakness in China's economy.

The euro fell 0.12 per cent to $1.098 as markets now price in a pause in rate hikes by the European Central Bank. Euro zone inflation fell further in July and the bloc returned to growth in the second quarter with a greater-than-expected expansion. Sterling last traded at $1.2774, down 0.49 per cent on the day. Money markets now see a 60 per cent probability that the Bank of England will hike rates by 25 basis points on Thursday. 

Catch latest minute-by-minute stock market updates here. For all other news related to business, politics, tech, sports and auto, visit Zeebiz.com