Dollar advances on stronger-than-expected US jobs data
The dollar strengthened 0.70% to 144.705 versus the Japanese yen and was up 0.40% to 0.79510 against the Swiss franc. The U.S. currency is on track to notch a second consecutive session of gains against both safe-haven currencies.
The euro was 0.26% weaker at $1.1769. It is on track for the second straight day of losses.
U.S. Labor Department data on Thursday showed that nonfarm payrolls increased by 147,000 jobs in June. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast a rise of 110,000. The report was published a day early because of the July 4 U.S. Independence Day holiday.
"It will be very difficult for the Fed to cut rates in this environment, with the labor market so strong," said Axel Merk, president and chief investment officer at Merk Hard Currency Fund in California. "The argument that Jerome Powell has made for the Fed to stay on the sidelines continues to hold."
The dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of currencies including the yen and the euro, rose 0.27% to 97.01, on track for two straight sessions of gains, although it is still near multi-year lows.
The rise in the dollar following the data was accompanied by an increase in U.S. Treasury yields. The 2-year note yield, which typically moves in step with interest rate expectations for the Federal Reserve, rose 9.1 basis points to 3.88%. The yield on benchmark U.S. 10-year notes rose 4.1 basis points to 4.344%.
Wall Street stock indexes including Dow Jones Industrial Average, the benchmark S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite were all up on the session.
Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives advanced President Donald Trump's massive tax-cut and spending bill toward a final yes-or-no vote early on Thursday.
The U.S. has lifted restrictions on exports to China for chip design software developers and ethane producers, a sign of easing trade tensions between the countries. The dollar strengthened 0.06% to 7.164 versus the offshore Chinese yuan.
The British pound rose after losing ground in the previous session following a selloff in gilts. British Prime Minister Keir Starmer's office backed finance minister Rachel Reeves, easing concerns over her future. The pound strengthened 0.15% to $1.3656.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Japan Times
6 minutes ago
- Japan Times
GPIF logs $61 billion loss as weak dollar hits overseas assets
The Government Pension Investment Fund (GPIF) has suffered a quarterly loss as a depreciating dollar dragged down the value of its overseas securities and domestic assets slumped. GPIF, one of the world's largest state pension funds, lost ¥8.815 trillion ($61.1 billion), or 3.4%, in the January-March period, with assets totaling ¥249.8 trillion at the end of the quarter, it said in Tokyo on Friday. On an annual basis, the fund had a 0.7% return. The quarterly loss came as the rumblings of a global trade war due to higher U.S. tariffs hurt equities and the outlook for interest-rate cuts dragged down the dollar against the yen. GPIF incurred losses on all four of its asset classes for the first time since July-September 2022. "The January-March investment performance was mainly due to a sharp decline in foreign stocks,' GPIF President Kazuto Uchida said at a news conference after the announcement of the results. "We are considering increasing the ratio of active management.' Overseas investments slumped 6% for stocks and 2% for bonds during the quarter. Japanese stocks dropped 3.5%, while domestic debt slid 2.2%. During the quarter, the MSCI All-Country World Index of global stocks fell 1.7% and the S&P 500 dropped 4.6% as the Topix lost 4.5%. Yields on 10-year Treasurys dropped more than 30 basis points, while benchmark Japanese bond yields climbed around 40 basis points. The dollar fell 4.6% against the yen.

44 minutes ago
Ex-Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Official Guilty of Insider Trading
Tokyo, July 4 (Jiji Press)--Tokyo District Court on Friday sentenced a former employee of Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Bank to two years in prison, suspended for four years, for engaging in insider stock trading through the abuse of tender offer information before disclosure. In his trial presided by judge Reiko Kaihatsu, Hajime Katayama, 55, former chief of the Japanese trust bank's second stock transfer agency business department, was also fined 2 million yen and ordered to pay 61.4 million yen in additional penalty for his violation of the financial instruments and exchange law. Public prosecutors had demanded a two-year prison sentence, a fine of 2 million yen and a 61.4-million-yen additional penalty. The defendant "undermined financial market fairness and soundness by taking advantage of his position for his own benefits," the judge said. "There is no room for leniency in his motive of saving 20 million yen for his post-retirement life," the judge concluded. The judge refused the defense side's request for a reduction in the additional penalty, saying, "This cannot be treated as an exceptional case, because there are no particular circumstances that need to be taken into consideration." [Copyright The Jiji Press, Ltd.]


Nikkei Asia
an hour ago
- Nikkei Asia
Nissan to start shipping EVs from China in 2026
Nissan Motor's joint venture in China designed and developed the N7 electric sedan, pictured in Shenzhen in June. (Photo by Shizuka Tanabe) SHIZUKA TANABE GUANGZHOU, China -- Nissan Motor in 2026 will begin exporting electric vehicles from its plant in China to Southeast Asia, the Middle East and other markets, Nikkei has learned. The struggling Japanese automaker is reviewing its manufacturing operations around the world. It hopes to achieve a quick business turnaround by selling made-in-China EVs, which are competitive in price and performance, to many other markets.