
Dollar drifts as traders hunker down for U.S. payrolls
Sterling firmed slightly after a sharp drop the previous session as British Prime Minister Keir Starmer's office rushed to give Finance Minister Rachel Reeves his full backing, hoping to allay investor worries about Britain's finances.
The pound dropped nearly 1% and British government bonds tumbled on Wednesday, as a tearful appearance by Reeves in parliament a day after the government backed down on its welfare reforms reignited concern over Britain's finances.
The pound last fetched $1.3647, slightly higher in Asian hours, while the euro was steady at $1.1806, hovering close to the September 2021 top it touched earlier this week. The yen firmed a bit to 143.56 per dollar.
The dollar, which measures the U.S. currency against six other units, was at 96.701, still near the 3-1/2-year lows it has been rooted to this week. The index is on course for a 0.5% drop in the week.
Investor attention will be on the U.S. Labor Department's comprehensive employment report for June, due to be released on Thursday ahead of the July 4 holiday after data showed private payrolls fell for the first time in more than two years in June.
The ADP report released on Wednesday pushed traders to shift expectations of when the Fed will cut interest rates. Traders are pricing in 25% chance of the Fed moving in July versus 20% a day earlier, CME FedWatch tool showed.
"The ADP print has certainly raised the stakes for nonfarm payrolls today," said Charu Chanana, chief investment strategist at Saxo in Singapore.
"What could earlier have been interpreted as 'bad news is good news' (softer data pushing the Fed to cut) may now simply be seen as bad news, especially if recession concerns take hold."
Ahead of the July 9 tariff deadline, President Donald Trump announced Vietnam had struck a trade deal with the U.S. and could push other countries to reach similar agreements on duties.
Although details were scant, Trump said Vietnamese goods would face a 20% tariff and trans-shipments from third countries through Vietnam will face a 40% levy.
"What's important to watch now is how China responds, given that the move directly targets trans-shipped goods at a higher 40% tariff rate," said Saxo's Chanana.
"It's a clear signal that global supply chains are being reshaped, and more disruption may be ahead."
Meanwhile, Republicans in the House of Representatives struggled to pass Trump's massive tax-cut and spending bill as a handful of hardliners withheld their support over concerns about its cost.
The bill is expected to add $3.3 trillion to the already swelling national debt, stoking fiscal worries. Bond investors around the world are growing increasingly nervous about government deficits from Japan to the United States.
Eddy Loh, chief investment officer at Maybank Wealth Management, said the U.S. government may be "somewhat constrained about how much fiscal support they can do to boost the economy without creating too many deficit concerns."
Hashtags

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


Politico
41 minutes ago
- Politico
How the lone farmer running a state government is navigating Trump's turbulent policies
Those relationships are all the more important. Nebraska agriculture runs our economy. There's other things that are really important, too. Manufacturing. Our Air Force base is off the charts. And we have the most significant insurance industry in the United States. We've got an incredibly strong economy, but agriculture drives it. We feed the world from Nebraska agriculture and save the planet, and we raise way more than we can consume in the United States and in Nebraska. So international trade is gigantic, and those relationships are important. Everybody we do business [with] understands that we have to have fair, long-term relationships. I've been a big advocate my whole life that we've been messing up with how we do trade. It has to be fair. It's got to be free. And it's got to be balanced. So when the country is out of whack with trade deficits that we're being severely taken advantage of, it hurts us in a few spots. We're getting dinged right now a little bit [in the agriculture sector], but we're in it for the long haul. Nebraska, farmers and ranchers. We're not publicly traded companies. We're not looking for a return next quarter. We're in it for the next generations. What President Trump's doing, I'm 100 percent with him. The reconciliation bill includes cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, which benefits 155,000 Nebraskans, 8 percent of the population. What do you think about the state potentially taking up that burden? Here's what's really, really important to understand. Number one, the people in Nebraska, we've got each other's backs. We step up and take care of people and solve problems. If the federal government is going to have mandates on us and not [support them] economically, we're going to have conversations. If we have to pay for it, we're going to run it our way. It's simple, we're going to take care of the vulnerable Nebraskans. But again, if the federal government has a program that we have to pay for, we're going to do it the Nebraska way, not the federal government's way. 'The First Furrow' by artist James Penney hangs in a vestibule of the Nebraska State Capitol. | Shia Kapos/POLITICO What is the Nebraska way? The Nebraska way is education and innovation, not regulation. People aren't buying pop and candy, they're getting the best value to feed their family. A bill that you supported during the legislative session would restrict business dealings with foreign adversaries. Would that impact your company doing business with Smithfield Foods, which is owned by a Chinese company?


New York Times
42 minutes ago
- New York Times
Trump Keeps Foreign Countries on Edge as Tariff Deadline Nears
President Trump is set to rekindle economic pressure on America's trading partners this week, as a deadline for making trade deals elapses and the administration begins notifying countries of the tariffs they'll face on exports to the United States. For 90 days, the administration has been trying to reach trade pacts with dozens of countries in an attempt to lower economic barriers to U.S. exports. In April, the president imposed stiff global tariffs on nearly every trading partner but paused most of those levies until July 9 to try and win concessions. So far, the United States has reached only two preliminary trade deals, with Britain and with Vietnam, which are scant on details and leave much to be worked out. More such limited trade deals could be announced in the coming days, including an initial trade framework with India. Countries that have so far agreed to trade deals, even preliminary handshake agreements, have qualified for lower tariff rates than what Mr. Trump threatened in April. Other countries that have not reached agreements are expected to face sharply higher tariffs, although the president and his advisers have recently implied that the tariffs may not go into effect until Aug. 1, rather than on July 9. Still, with tariffs threatening to strain diplomatic relations and bring some global commerce to a halt, a delay of a few weeks may not to do much to soothe many foreign governments. It could also further unsettle financial markets, which revolted when Mr. Trump initially announced his global tariffs, a meltdown that prompted Mr. Trump to institute the 90-day delay. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


New York Times
43 minutes ago
- New York Times
From Food Aid to Dog Chow? How Trump's Cuts Hurt Kansas Farmers.
Wheat grows so prodigiously here on the Kansas high plains that in 1953 the surplus birthed one of the Cold War's big ideas: Food for Peace, a federal government program that delivered the excess bounty to a hungry postwar world. Conceived by a Kansas farmer and created by President Dwight D. Eisenhower, Food for Peace has sent burlap sacks of grain stamped 'From the American People' to more than four billion people in 150 countries around the world. Now it is effectively dead. The program was administered by the U.S. Agency for International Development, which Elon Musk fed 'into the wood chipper' on a weekend in February. Kansas's Republican lawmakers tried to save it but failed to persuade President Trump, who last month proposed cutting the entire 2026 budget for Food for Peace as well as another food aid program dear to Kansans, the McGovern-Dole International Food for Education and Child Nutrition program. The Trump administration said the programs were inefficient and wasteful, 'with dubious results.' It was the latest blow to farmers, particularly in Kansas, where about 80 percent of those on the high plains voted for Mr. Trump and agriculture makes up almost half of the state's economy. The president's whipsawing tariffs and cuts to agriculture grants and global food aid have left the state with swollen silos, shrinking markets and volatile prices for crops. Last year Kansas sold half its annual wheat crop abroad, but those buyers have mostly dried up. At least one big grain broker is now trying to sell Kansas grain that once fed people overseas for use in dog food. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.