logo
Dollar higher as US producer prices surge in July

Dollar higher as US producer prices surge in July

CNA3 hours ago
NEW YORK :The U.S. dollar snapped a two-day losing streak on Thursday as data showed U.S. producer prices increased more than expected in July amid a surge in the costs of services and goods, suggesting a broader pickup in inflation in the months ahead.
The hot measure of inflation at the wholesale level follows the release on Tuesday of a better than feared rise in consumer prices in July, which emboldened traders to boost bets on interest rate cuts from the Federal Reserve in coming months.
While Thursday's data did not upset the case for a September rate cut it did raise worries that tariffs could still stir up inflation in coming months and change the course of interest rate cuts for the rest of the year.
It also hurt the case for the Fed to resume cutting rates with a 50 basis point cut in September, something Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent suggested in an interview on Wednesday.
"I think that was never particularly likely, but presumably this PPI report quashes that," Matt Weller, global head of market research at StoneX.
More importantly the inflation data raises questions about whether the Fed can deliver an aggressive pace of cuts for the rest of the year, he said.
"Some people were saying that we could see three consecutive 25 basis point rate cuts ... but if anything approaching this level of inflation is in place it seems like we might be looking at more of a max of two interest rate cuts and even that might be questionable," Weller said.
While financial markets have priced in an interest rate cut from the Federal Reserve next month, rising services inflation and the expectation tariffs could still significantly boost goods prices left some economists doubtful of an aggressive resumption in policy easing in the absence of further labor market deterioration.
Traders still see a Fed rate cut on September 17 as a near certainty, according to LSEG data.
The dollar index, measuring the currency against a basket of peers, was 0.5 per cent higher at 98.17. The euro was 0.5 per cent weaker at $1.16485 while the British pound eased 0.3 per cent to $1.3538.
Still, analysts warned against expecting a sustained rebound in the buck.
"The market is very much likely to remain 'all in' on the idea of a September cut, at least until we hear from Powell at Jackson Hole next week," Michael Brown, market analyst at online broker Pepperstone in London, said, referring to the Fed's Jackson Hole Economic Symposium later this month.
The yen rose against the dollar earlier in the session after Bessent suggested the Bank of Japan needs to raise rates again soon, before ceding ground to trade about flat on the day at 147.385 yen to a dollar.
The stronger greenback weighed on the Australian dollar even as upbeat jobs data calmed concerns about a downturn in the labour market and lessened the need for another rate cut in the very near term. The Aussie was last down 0.8 per cent to $0.6493..
Meanwhile, bitcoin earlier hit its first record peak since July 14, pushing as high as $124,480.82 before trimming gains and was last down nearly 4 per cent at around $118,536.
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.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Stocks retreat after hot US inflation data shakes Fed rate cut hopes
Stocks retreat after hot US inflation data shakes Fed rate cut hopes

CNA

time36 minutes ago

  • CNA

Stocks retreat after hot US inflation data shakes Fed rate cut hopes

NEW YORK/LONDON :Global stocks retreated from record highs on Thursday while U.S. Treasury yields rose after market expectations for an interest rate cut by the Federal Reserve were shaken by stronger-than-expected inflation data. U.S. producer prices rose 0.9 per cent in July, the Labor Department reported, surpassing consensus forecasts for a 0.2 per cent gain. Investors have been watching for signs of inflation pressures from U.S. President Donald Trump's trade tariffs. Wall Street stocks fell, with the benchmark S&P 500 and Nasdaq pulling back from record highs reached on Wednesday. Materials, real estate and industrials stocks were driving losses. Communication services and healthcare stocks were gaining. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.38 per cent, the S&P 500 slid 0.25 per cent and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 0.30 per cent. European stocks held onto gains from earlier in the day and were last 0.49 per cent higher. MSCI's gauge of stocks across the globe fell 0.37 per cent to 949.56, taking a breather a day after hitting an all-time high. "We have been too anxious to draw a conclusion that the economy is fine; it's not overheated," said Peter Andersen, founder of Andersen Capital Management in Boston. "But this wholesale data does show that perhaps there is some inflation working and we shouldn't be so quick to conclude, we need to cut interest rates." U.S. Treasury yields leaped after the inflation data as expectations for jumbo Fed rate cuts briefly faded. The two-year note yield was last up 5.4 basis points at 3.741 per cent. The benchmark U.S. 10-year note yield rose 5.1 basis points to 4.291 per cent. Money markets showed traders still almost unanimously expect the Fed to cut borrowing costs next month, although some traders have lowered their bets. Markets are predicting a 92.5 per cent chance that the Fed will cut rates by 25 basis points in September, down slightly from 94.3 per cent on Wednesday but up from nearly 59 per cent, according to the CME FedWatch tool. "It reinforces the case that the Fed might say we still don't have a clear picture yet based on the tariffs in the employment picture to take any action and I would expect that they would tend to be neutral and make no change in September as opposed to the majority of opinions out there," Anderson said. UK and euro area government bonds sold off alongside Treasuries. The benchmark 10-year Bund yield was up 50 bps at 2.71 per cent and Britain's equivalent gilt yield rose 4 bps to 4.643 per cent. About 70 per cent of global investors expect U.S. stagflation, with growth slowing as consumer price rises accelerate, to become the dominant market narrative within three months, a Bank of America survey found this week. The dollar rose against major peers after falling in the prior session. It strengthened 0.27 per cent to 147.78 against the Japanese yen and was up 0.39 per cent at 0.808 against the Swiss franc. The euro fell 0.55 per cent to $1.164. The dollar index tracking the greenback against peers including the euro and Japan's yen edged 0.6 per cent higher. Trump on Wednesday threatened "severe consequences" if Russian leader Vladimir Putin did not agree to peace in Ukraine and has also floated the idea of a second summit that would include Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy. Brent crude, the global oil benchmark, rose from almost a two-month low with a 1.7 per cent jump to $66.75 a barrel and U.S. crude added 1.8 per cent to $63.77.

AI startup Cohere valued at $6.8 billion in latest fundraise, appoints new executives
AI startup Cohere valued at $6.8 billion in latest fundraise, appoints new executives

CNA

timean hour ago

  • CNA

AI startup Cohere valued at $6.8 billion in latest fundraise, appoints new executives

Cohere was valued at $6.8 billion after its latest $500 million funding round, as the artificial intelligence startup moves to expand its market share in a highly competitive industry. The funding round was led by Radical Ventures and Inovia Capital, with participation from existing investors AMD Ventures, NVIDIA, PSP Investments, and Salesforce Ventures, among others. Unlike most AI companies like OpenAI and Meta's Llama, which are focused on broad foundational models, Cohere builds enterprise-specific AI models. In January, it launched North, a ChatGPT-style tool designed to help knowledge workers with tasks such as document summarization. The company said it will use the new funding to advance agentic AI that can help businesses and governments operate more efficiently. Alongside the fundraise, Cohere appointed Joelle Pineau, former Vice President of AI Research at Meta, as Chief AI Officer, and Francois Chadwick, former CFO at Uber and Shield AI, as Chief Financial Officer. The fundraise comes amid a broader surge in AI financing, as private equity and Big Tech channel capital into startups in pursuit of strong returns from innovative AI products.

Fed expected to stick with regular-sized rate cut after hot inflation data
Fed expected to stick with regular-sized rate cut after hot inflation data

Business Times

time2 hours ago

  • Business Times

Fed expected to stick with regular-sized rate cut after hot inflation data

[WASHINGTON] A jump in US wholesale prices last month looks to have all but erased the possibility that the Federal Reserve will deliver a jumbo-sized half-percentage-point interest rate cut in September, though expectations for a quarter-percentage-point move next month, followed by another in October, remain intact. US producer prices rose 0.9 per cent in July amid a surge in the costs of goods but also of services like machinery and equipment wholesaling, the Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics said on Thursday (Aug 14). The increase, which far exceeded economists' expectations, may get passed on to consumers, who so far have not experienced a strong overall increase in prices even as the Trump administration has ratcheted up import tariffs. 'We expect a stronger pass-through of levies into consumer prices in coming months, with inflation likely to climb modestly over the second half of 2025,' said Ben Ayers, senior economist at Nationwide. The rise in services inflation will be particularly worrisome to Fed policymakers like Chicago Fed president Austan Goolsbee, who said on Wednesday he's on alert for signs that inflation is seeping into prices beyond those for goods affected directly by tariffs. An increase in services inflation, also evident in the consumer price data released on Tuesday, suggests inflation could become a more persistent problem, he said. US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who is leading the search for a replacement for Fed chair Jerome Powell, has been pushing for a bigger rate cut next month, citing tame inflation, though on Thursday he said the US central bank could start with a quarter-percentage-point move. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up Before the data, traders put about a 3 per cent probability on the idea of a half-percentage-point rate cut, with most bets firmly on a quarter-percentage-point reduction. After the data, traders erased bets on a 50-basis-point move. San Francisco Fed president Mary Daly, who signalled earlier this week that she is increasingly open to the idea of a rate cut given the softening in the labour market, told the Wall Street Journal in a story published on Thursday that a 50-basis-point rate cut would signal an urgency about the job market that she does not feel. 'It has been acting as a bucket of really cool water poured on the heads of those calling for 50 basis points in September,' Slawomir Soroczynski, head of fixed income at Crown Agents Investment Management, said after the data. Rate-sensitive two-year Treasury yields jumped more than five basis points after the data and were last at 3.722 per cent, over three basis points higher than on Wednesday. Benchmark 10-year yields were up about two basis points on the day, at 4.264 per cent. 'The large spike in the Producer Price Index this morning shows inflation is coursing through the economy, even if it hasn't been felt by consumers yet,' said Chris Zaccarelli, chief investment officer for Northlight Asset Management. 'Given how benign the CPI (consumer price index) numbers were on Tuesday, this is a most unwelcome surprise to the upside and is likely to unwind some of the optimism of a 'guaranteed' rate cut next month,' he said in a note. The Fed will get another round of inflation data and a fresh jobs report before its Sep 16 to Sep 17 policy meeting. REUTERS

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