
Dollar struggles as Fed rate-cut bets build, bitcoin soars to record
The greenback fared worst against the yen after U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent suggested the Bank of Japan needs to hike rates again soon, while the Fed cuts aggressively.
Rising expectations for monetary easing combined with increasing institutional cryptocurrency investment powered bitcoin to a fresh record peak.
Australia's dollar gained after data showed the labour market to be surprisingly resilient.
That was a different story than the U.S., where Fed rhetoric has turned broadly more dovish on signs of a cooling labour market, while President Donald Trump's tariffs are yet to add to price pressures in a significant way.
Traders see a Fed rate cut on September 17 as a near certainty, according to LSEG data, and even lay around 7 per cent odds on a super-sized half-point reduction.
"For the markets, it's not even a matter of if the Fed cuts interest rates in September, it's a question of how much," said Kyle Rodda, an analyst at Capital.com.
"Signs of a downturn in the labour market have pushed futures to bake in a series of rate cuts before the end of the year."
The Fed also continues to be under intense political pressure to ease.
Trump has repeatedly criticised Fed Chair Jerome Powell for not cutting rates sooner, even threatening to oust him before Powell's term expires in May.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Wednesday called for a "series of rate cuts," and said the Fed could kick off the policy easing with a half-point cut.
Bessent also said the BOJ had gotten "behind the curve" by delaying rate hikes.
"Bessent's comments are having a strong impact on USDJPY," said Norihiro Yamaguchi, an economist at Oxford Economics.
At the same time, "gains in the yen are being accelerated by low liquidity in the market as fewer market participants are around this week" due to the Obon holiday, he said.
The U.S. dollar dropped as much as 0.7 per cent to 146.35 yen on Thursday, its weakest since July 24.
Sterling edged up enough to reach its highest since July 24 at $1.3590.
The euro hovered at $1.1703, just below Wednesday's peak of $1.1730, a level last seen on July 28.
Meanwhile, a weaker U.S. dollar, the spectre of political interference in central bank policy, and the increase in investor risk appetite amid Fed easing prospects all converged to buoy bitcoin to its first record peak since July 14.
The world's leading cryptocurrency pushed as high as $124,480.82 in the latest session, before last changing hands at around $123,000.
Bitcoin was already underpinned by increased institutional money flows this year in the wake of a spate of regulatory changes spearheaded by Trump, who has billed himself the "cryptocurrency president."
In the latest move, an executive order last week paved the way to allow crypto assets in 401(k) retirement accounts.
"Corporate treasuries like MicroStrategy and Block Inc. continue to buy bitcoin," said IG analyst Tony Sycamore.
"Technically, a sustained break above $125,000 could propel bitcoin to $150,000."
The Australian dollar advanced as much as 0.4 per cent to the highest since July 28 at $0.65685, although it later trimmed those gains to stand at $0.6552.
Australian employment rebounded in July as firms took on more full-time workers, pulling the jobless rate down from a 3-1/2-year high.
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