By Kevin Buckland
TOKYO (Reuters) – The dollar soared to a two-week high against its major peers on Thursday, as a rout in Treasuries improved the currency’s allure due to both higher U.S. yields and demand for safe haven assets.
The dollar pushed to a two-week top versus the euro and extended its rebound from a more than two-month low to sterling following a two-day, 15-basis point jump above 4.6% for long-term Treasury yields after more robust U.S. economic data and some poorly received bond auctions.
The bond market rout has spooked investors, with equities globally sliding sharply this week, spurring a rush to the safest assets.
The dollar index, which measures the currency against six major peers, including the euro, sterling and the Japanese yen, reached the highest since May 14 at 105.15 on Thursday, following a 0.5% advance in the prior session.
The euro slipped to $1.0796 for the first time since May 14, and sterling sank to $1.2696, continuing its retreat after reaching $1.2801 on Tuesday for the first time since March 21.
The yen, however, climbed off a four-week low of 157.715 per dollar from overnight to last trade at 157.505.
Japan’s currency has been marching steadily lower this month, heading back toward the 34-year trough of 160.245 from a month ago, which spurred a rapid rebound that market players strongly suspect to have been two rounds of dollar-selling intervention by the Ministry of Finance and Bank of Japan.
Expectations for Federal Reserve interest rate cuts this year have been pared back amid signs of sticky inflation, most recently with a surprise uptick in consumer sentiment in data on Tuesday.
Revised U.S. GDP figures are due later in the day, followed on Friday by the main macro event of this week, the release of the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) price index – the Fed’s preferred measure of inflation.
“The deepening rout in the U.S. bond market is fast becoming the BOJ’s worst nightmare, necessitating hurried consideration about the appropriate level to intervene for a third time this year,” Tony Sycamore, senior analyst at IG, wrote in a report.
“The bond market bogey is well-positioned to wrest deeper control of the broader market, particularly if upcoming growth and inflation data are on the firmer side of the ledger.”
(Reporting by Kevin Buckland; Editing by Jamie Freed)
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