
Dollar tumbles, traders price in more US rate cuts after weak jobs report
Employers added 73,000 jobs last month, below the 100,000 expected by economists polled by Reuters, while the unemployment rate edged higher to 4.2 per cent, as anticipated, up from 4.1 per cent in June. Job gains for June were revised down to 14,000, from the previously reported 147,000.
'It's worse than anyone expected and the kicker is that downward revision for the prior month too,' said Helen Given, director of trading at Money USA in Washington.
The dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of currencies including the yen and the euro, was last down 1.09 per cent on the day at 98.94.
The euro rose 1.22 per cent to $1.1554. The single currency reached $1.1389 earlier on Friday, the lowest since June 10.
Against the Japanese yen, the dollar weakened 1.58 per cent to 148.35. The greenback earlier reached 150.91, the highest since March 28.
The Fed has indicated it is in no rush to cut rates due to concern that President Donald Trump's tariff policies will reignite inflation over the coming months.
Fed funds futures traders pared bets on how many times the U.S. central bank is likely to cut rates this year after Fed Chair Jerome Powell on Wednesday offered a hawkish outlook for monetary policy and declined to indicate that a cut in September was likely.
But they ramped up bets on cuts again on Friday after the jobs data. Traders are now pricing in 54 basis points of cuts by year-end, up from around 34 basis points on Thursday, with the first cut seen in September.
Whether the Fed cuts in September will now likely depend on the next jobs report for August.
'(Powell) did say on Wednesday that we were looking at holding rates steadier for longer, but that we were going to get two sets of employment data before the next Fed meeting. So as this first set has been so decidedly negative… the labor market is clearly, clearly cooling, that's going to raise the importance of that September figure as well,' said Given.
The dollar had gained earlier on Friday after Trump imposed new tariff rates on dozens of trade partners.
The Swiss franc was among the hardest hit as Switzerland now faces a 39 per cent rate.
The Swissie fell against a range of currencies in response to Trump's hefty duties and to his demand that pharma companies - key Swiss exporters - lower the prices at which they sell to U.S. consumers.
The dollar was last down 0.82 per cent against the Swiss franc at 0.806, after earlier reaching 0.8171, the highest since June 23.
The Canadian dollar strengthened 0.58 per cent versus the greenback to C$1.38 per dollar, after earlier easing to C$1.3879, the weakest since May 22. Canada was hit with a 35 per cent tariff, instead of the threatened 25 per cent.
The dollar had also gained against other currencies due to drivers other than tariffs. The yen was earlier headed for its largest weekly loss this year after the Bank of Japan signaled it was in no hurry to resume interest rate hikes, prompting Finance Minister Katsunobu Kato to say on Friday that officials were "alarmed" by currency moves.
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