US inflation data expected to impact dollar, bitcoin remains steady in advance of release.

Dollar Eases and Bitcoin Stands Firm Ahead of US Inflation Data

Market Anticipation

The dollar saw a slight decline on Thursday as traders awaited U.S. inflation data to confirm whether bets on multiple Fed interest rate cuts this year were justified. At the same time, weak Japanese wages data caused the yen to fall to a six-week low against the euro.

Bitcoin’s Surge

Bitcoin neared $47,000, trading close to a two-year high, with investors welcoming the much-anticipated U.S. approval of spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds. This approval opens the way for institutional buying and has driven the cryptocurrency up 70% since mid-October.

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Anticipating US Consumer Inflation

The main event for the currency market on Thursday is the release of monthly U.S. consumer inflation data, which economists expect to have slowed again in December. The dollar has slid in recent weeks, with investors increasingly convinced that the Federal Reserve could start cutting rates as early as March.

Rate-Cut Fever

The futures market shows investors expect 140 basis points (bps) of cuts this year with a two-thirds chance they will begin as soon as March, leaving prices sensitive to data surprises. However, some argue that the market remains too aggressive around interest rate cuts expectations.

Global Currency Movements

After gaining sharply on Wednesday, the dollar fell 0.23% to 145.45 yen, though the Japanese currency struck a six-week low of 160 per euro overnight. In Europe, the euro rose 0.1% to $1.0978, while sterling rose 0.2% to $1.2761. The softer dollar also helped the yuan off a one-month trough to 7.169 per dollar.

Global Central Bank Decisions

South Korea’s central bank kept interest rates unchanged for an eighth consecutive meeting, as expected, leaving the won stronger at 1,312.9 per dollar.

By Amanda Cooper

LONDON (Reuters) – The dollar edged lower on Thursday as traders waited for U.S. inflation data to confirm whether bets on as many as five Fed interest rate cuts this year were justified, while weak Japanese wages data sent the yen to a six-week low against the euro.

neared $47,000, trading close to a two-year high, with investors welcoming the much-anticipated U.S. approval of spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds.

The approval opens the way for institutional buying and had been priced in over recent months, driving the cryptocurrency up 70% since mid-October.

The main event for the currency market on Thursday is monthly U.S. consumer inflation, which economists expected to have slowed again in December.

The dollar has slid in recent weeks, as investors have become increasingly convinced the Federal Reserve could start cutting rates as early as March – an expectation many in the market see as excessive.

“It’s a bit like an errant school child runs away with itself and gets carried away and needs to be reined in as the data comes out,” CMC Markets (LON:) chief markets strategist Michael Hewson said.

“For me, the market is thinking way too far ahead. Yes, rate cuts are coming, that is pretty much a given. But do I really think the Fed is going to cut rates in March, unless there is a problem in the banking sector or the commercial real estate sector in the United States? Then, they might be compelled to do something like that.”

The , which staged a robust rally last week, was last down 0.1% on the day.

RATE-CUT FEVER

The futures market shows investors expect 140 basis points (bps) of cuts this year with a two-thirds chance they will begin as soon as March, leaving prices sensitive to data surprises.

“In the end, in our view, markets remain too aggressive around interest rate cuts expectations,” Julien Lafargue, chief market strategist at Barclays Private Bank, said.

“While an upside surprise to the December CPI may not be enough to change this perception, it could be a first step in allowing markets to align with the Fed’s narrative that cuts will come, but not just yet,” Lafargue said.

U.S. core inflation is seen at 0.3% for the month and 3.8% year-on-year for December, its slowest since early 2021.

After gaining sharply on Wednesday the dollar fell 0.23% to 145.45 yen, though the Japanese currency struck a six-week low of 160 per euro overnight.

Data on Wednesday showed Japanese workers’ real wages shrank for a 20th straight month in November – confounding officials’ wishes to see wage gains before tightening policy.

In Europe, the euro rose 0.1% to $1.0978, while sterling rose 0.2% to $1.2761.

Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey, addressing lawmakers on Wednesday, said he did not want to comment on the outlook for monetary policy “but let’s just take the market for a moment – obviously that is feeding through into mortgage costs and I hope that is something that continues.”

The softer dollar helped off a one-month trough to 7.169 per dollar.

South Korea’s central bank kept interest rates unchanged for an eighth consecutive meeting, as expected, leaving the won stronger at 1,312.9 per dollar.

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