logo
Pound strengthens as dollar loses safe haven appeal; GBPINR soars above 117 mark

Pound strengthens as dollar loses safe haven appeal; GBPINR soars above 117 mark

GBPUSD surges to a weeks high above $1.36 mark on Tuesday tracking weakness in dollar overseas. Risk sentiment improved after President Trump announced that a ceasefire has been agreed upon between Iran and Israel, reducing appeal for the safe haven currency. Moreover, Fed Governor Bowman and Chicago Fed President Goolsbee said they favored a Fed rate cut at next months FOMC meeting weighing on the greenback. The dollar index that measures the greenback against a basket of currencies is quoting at 97.70, down 0.32% on the day. Investors await Chair Powells semiannual testimonies and the US June Consumer Confidence report later today for fresh cues. Meanwhile, in UK, BoE Governor Andrew Bailey's testimony before the Lords Economic Affairs Committee and speeches from Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) member Megan Greene and Deputy Governor Dave Ramsden during the day will be watched. GBPUSD is currently seen quoting at $1.3609, up 0.60% on the day. On the NSE, GBPINR futures climbed 0.77% to 117.09.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump wants to cut deficits. Powell-bashing, stablecoins, and T-bills could help.
Trump wants to cut deficits. Powell-bashing, stablecoins, and T-bills could help.

Mint

time9 minutes ago

  • Mint

Trump wants to cut deficits. Powell-bashing, stablecoins, and T-bills could help.

President Trump has been waging a campaign to oust Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell. What do President Donald Trump's campaign to oust Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, legislation to regulate digital stablecoins, and the Treasury's debt-management practices have to do with one another? All relate to holding down the rise of the interest cost on federal government debt, a major factor boosting the budget deficit from the recently passed Big Beautiful Bill. Trump recently posted on Truth Social that if the Federal Reserve would slash its key federal-funds policy rate, now set in a range of 4.25% to 4.5%, by multiple percentage points, it could save the government billions in interest costs. The yield on Treasury debt has turned higher as notes from the near-zero-interest-rate eras following the 2008-09 financial crisis and the Covid pandemic mature. They will be replaced with notes yielding nearly 4% or higher. It's true, T-bills could be sold at lower rates if Powell & Co. would acquiesce to Trump's wishes. Meanwhile, BNP Paribas rate strategists Guneet Dhingra, Sebastian Mauleon, and Timothy High wrote recently that the Treasury should take a 'T-bill and chill" tack. That would produce a 'significant cost saving" for the Treasury. It wouldn't reduce the deficit, but it would reduce the government's interest expense, which is already running at over a $1 trillion annual rate and exceeding the U.S. military budget, as I've noted previously. The Treasury has kept T-bills to about 15% to 20% of its total issuance, but the BNP strategists argue that the department should think about upping that to 20% to 25%. Demand from money-market funds and overseas investors (buyers of some $336 billion of bills in the latest 12 months) should absorb the increased supply. Fewer notes and bonds, they note, should tend to reduce intermediate- and long-term yields. Former Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen was criticized for tilting the government's securities sales toward shorter maturities starting in late 2022. One of those critics was Scott Bessent, her successor, who hasn't changed the Treasury's financing mix since taking over this year. However, Powell has said that the Treasury's financing costs don't enter into the Fed's interest-rate decisions. This past week, Kevin Warsh, widely viewed as a candidate to replace Powell, posited that the Treasury and Fed should coordinate their debt-management policies. 'We need a new Treasury-Fed accord, like we did in 1951 after another period where we built up our nation's debt and we were stuck with a central bank that was working at cross-purposes with the Treasury," he told CNBC. Tilting Treasury borrowing to the short end is 'stealth QE," according to Dario Perkins, managing director for Global Macro. Quantitative easing describes central bank buying of securities to inject liquidity into the financial system. The idea behind QE is to reduce the supply of long-term government paper available to investors and force them to buy corporate and mortgage debt to stimulate the economy, as former Fed Chair Ben Bernanke explained back in 2010. QE has mainly served to boost financial markets, Warsh said, as the S&P 500 index and Nasdaq Composite hit records again last week, corporate credit spreads historically narrowed, and initial public offerings picked up. On Main Street, however, credit is tight, owing to the level of short-term rates. (Small businesses borrowing from banks typically pay some spread over the posted prime rate, currently 7.5%.) Now comes the crypto connection to all of this. The passage this week of the so-called Genius bill sets standards for stablecoins, which are digital currencies pegged to the dollar or another actual currency. Stablecoins would have to be fully collateralized by safe assets, notably U.S. government debt. That would boost demand for Treasury bills, Torsten Sløk, Apollo Global Management's chief economist, wrote recently. He cites a recent Bank for International Settlements paper that estimates that an aggregate $3.5 billion flowing in stablecoins lowers the three-month T-bill rate by 2.5 basis points in 10 days and five basis points in 20 days. (A basis point is a hundredth of a percentage point.) Circle July 30 on your calendars to see how these disparate forces come together. The Treasury is due to announce its quarterly financing plans that morning, while the Federal Open Market Committee will announce its rate decision that afternoon, followed by Powell's news conference. The fed-funds futures market on Friday puts a 95% probability of no interest rate change then, according to the CME FedWatch tool, but Fed Gov. Christopher Waller late on Thursday argued for a quarter-point cut then. That may make him the new front-runner in the race to replace Powell, says Washington watcher Greg Valliere, chief U.S. policy strategist for AGF Investments, although he trails Warsh, Bessent, and Kevin Hassett, head of the National Economic Council, in the Polymarket betting. Speaking for the likely majority, Fed Gov. Adriana Kugler this past week said no rate reduction is appropriate now, given that the economy is near full employment, inflation remains above the Fed's 2% goal, and tariffs are exerting upward price pressures. Kugler's term runs out in January; her replacement is certain to echo Trump's call for rate cuts. Write to Randall W. Forsyth at

'We have smart president, won't let dollar fall'; Trump slams 'little group called BRICS'; claims it seeks to end US currency dominance
'We have smart president, won't let dollar fall'; Trump slams 'little group called BRICS'; claims it seeks to end US currency dominance

Time of India

time22 minutes ago

  • Time of India

'We have smart president, won't let dollar fall'; Trump slams 'little group called BRICS'; claims it seeks to end US currency dominance

US President Donald Trump has slammed the BRICS grouping, calling it a "little group" trying to challenge the "dominance of dollar." He warned that member nations, Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa could face a 10% tariff if they pursue such efforts. "You have this little group called BRICS. It's fading out fast, but BRICS is, they wanted to try and take over the dollar, the dominance of the dollar, and the standard of the dollar," Trump told reporters at the White House on Friday. Speaking during the signing of the GENIUS Act, the first US law creating a regulatory framework for stablecoin cryptocurrencies, Trump said, "No, we're not going to let the dollar slide. If we have a smart president, you're never going to let the dollar slide." "If you have a dummy, that could happen," he added. He further warned that, "anybody that's in the BRICS consortium of nations, we're going to tariff you 10 per cent." Trump said BRICS nations held a meeting the next day, but "almost nobody showed up" because "they didn't want to be tariffed. It's amazing," he remarked. "There is a little group..." Trump ridicules BRICS, issues 10% tariff threat Trump underscored the importance of protecting the US dollar and said that it must remain the world's reserve currency "for generations to come," calling it 'so important.' by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like New South Wales Residents Born 1945-1985 With No Life Insurance Could Be Eligible For This Golden Insurance Undo He warned, "If we lost that, that would be like losing a world war.' "We can never let anyone play games with us, and that's why when I heard about this group from BRICS- six countries basically, I hit them very, very hard and if they ever form, if they ever really formed in a meaningful way, it will end very quickly... I don't think they'll even do it. They're virtually afraid of me," Trump added. This marks the second time in 10 days that Trump has issued a tariff threat to BRICS nations amid growing global discussions around alternatives to the dollar in international trade. Trump initially issued the warning on July 6, accusing the BRICS group — now expanded to include Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, and the UAE, of trying to "hurt" the US and "degenerate" the dollar. Despite Trump's repeated claims, no evidence has been presented to show Brics aims to undermine the dollar or harm the US. The 17th BRICS Summit, held in Rio de Janeiro on July 6-7, included a declaration that indirectly criticised the US, expressing serious concern over unilateral tariff hikes. Meanwhile, India and the US concluded the fifth round of talks for a proposed bilateral trade agreement (BTA) in Washington on July 17. Led by India's chief negotiator Rajesh Agrawal, the four-day negotiations aim to finalise an interim trade deal before the August 1 deadline, when the suspension of Trump-era tariffs, including a 26% levy on Indian exports, is set to expire. Stay informed with the latest business news, updates on bank holidays and public holidays . AI Masterclass for Students. Upskill Young Ones Today!– Join Now

At all-party meet before Monsoon Session, Opposition presses Centre on Bihar SIR, Trump's ceasefire claims
At all-party meet before Monsoon Session, Opposition presses Centre on Bihar SIR, Trump's ceasefire claims

New Indian Express

timean hour ago

  • New Indian Express

At all-party meet before Monsoon Session, Opposition presses Centre on Bihar SIR, Trump's ceasefire claims

An all-party meeting convened by the Union government on Sunday ahead of the Monsoon session of Parliament saw the Opposition raise a host of contentious issues — including voter roll revisions in Bihar, the recent terror attack in Pahalgam, and US President Donald Trump's controversial claims of brokering a ceasefire between India and Pakistan. While the government sought the cooperation of opposition parties for the smooth conduct of the House, the meeting quickly pivoted to pointed demands for accountability. Congress Deputy Leader in the Lok Sabha, Gaurav Gogoi, told reporters that his party had asked for a statement from Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Trump's remarks, what he described as 'lapses' that led to the Pahalgam attack, and the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls in Bihar. 'It is incumbent on PM Modi to give a statement in Parliament on key issues raised by the Congress,' Gogoi said. The concerns were echoed by CPI(M) MP John Brittas, who also urged the PM Modi to address the Parliament on both the Pahalgam attack and Trump's ceasefire claims, which he says merit urgent clarification.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store