The U.S. dollar is moderately weakening against the euro and the pound, and is rising against the yen in trading on Monday.
The ICE-calculated index showing the dollar’s dynamics against six currencies (euro, Swiss franc, yen, Canadian dollar, pound sterling and Swedish krona) is losing 0.12%, while the broader WSJ Dollar Index is down 0.11%.
The euro/dollar pair is trading at $1.1037 as of 2:50 p.m., up from $1.1018 at the close of the previous session, the euro is strengthening about 0.2%.
The dollar/yen was up 0.2% to 135.17 yen from 134.86 yen in Friday trading.
The pound rose 0.15% to $1.2653 from $1.2633.
Traders’ attention this week is focused on the Bank of England meeting, the results of which will be announced on Thursday. The British Central Bank is expected to raise its benchmark rate by 25 basis points (bps) at its upcoming meeting, to 4.5%.
Last week, the European Central Bank (ECB) and the Federal Reserve (Fed) raised rates by a similar amount.
“The interest rate differential between the eurozone and the U.S. continues to narrow, which reduces pressure on the euro against the dollar,” said Commonwealth Bank of Australia analyst Carol Kong. – We expect that the euro will continue to receive support due to the fact that the market expects rate cuts in the U.S. later this year and new raises from the ECB.
Traders are also waiting for U.S. consumer price data for April, which will be released Wednesday. The consensus analyst forecast, cited by Trading Economics, suggests that inflation in the U.S. last month remained at March’s 5% annualized rate.