The dollar posted a moderate increase against most major currencies for a second consecutive session on Thursday, with a mild recovery of 0.06% seen in the dollar index (USDX) which ended the session right above the 103.0 mark. The move was partly attributed to new U.S. labor market data that showed unemployment benefits fell more than expected last week, easing fears of an imminent recession. The main focus for dollar traders now lies on inflation data due next week.
The CME FedWatch tool currently shows a 45.5% probability of a quarter-point interest rate cut by the Federal Reserve in September, while a half-point reduction is seen as more likely at 54.5%. Moreover, the market is pricing in another rate cut in November, with a 51.7% chance.
The Japan 225 jumped 2% in early Friday trading as concerns about an impending U.S. recession eased. Optimism was also boosted by mildly positive inflation figures from China. However, despite the rally, regional markets were still on track for weekly losses following significant declines at the start of the week.
Bitcoin and Ethereum, the top two cryptocurrencies by market capitalization, surged on Thursday posting gains of 11.89% and 14.52% respectively as risk sentiment improves, tracking a rally in broader markets, especially equities, following better-than-expected weekly jobless claims data. An additional boost in bitcoin derived from the fact that even though $3.2 billion in Bitcoin was allocated to Mt.Gox creditors, the market hasn’t seen a sell-off related to that distribution.
Wall Street stocks staged a strong recovery on Thursday, erasing a large portion of the week’s heavy losses. Positive corporate earnings reports and continued expectations of interest rate cuts fueled the rally. However, major U.S. indexes were still on track for a significantly negative week after Monday’s sharp decline.
For the upcoming week market participants will be watching closely for Federal Reserve commentary as expectations for substantial interest rate cuts mount while the main focus lies on inflation numbers from the US in the form of PPI and CPI data, due on Tuesday and Wednesday.