TOKYO, July 3 ― The dollar struggled today, having been nudged off two-week highs as fading optimism over any near-term Sino-US trade deal revived safe-haven demand and drove US yields down.

US bond yields also tracked a decline in their British counterparts to 2-1/2-year lows on dovish-sounding comments from Bank of England Governor Mark Carney, which in turn weighed on the pound.

The dollar index against a basket of six major currencies stood at 96.742 after pulling back from 96.875 scaled yesterday, its highest since June 20.

The pound was steady at US$1.2597 (RM5.2134) after shedding 0.35 per cent the previous day, when it touched a two-week trough of US$1.2584.

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BoE's Carney said yesterday that a global trade war and a no-deal Brexit were growing risks to Britain's economy which might need more help to cope with a downturn, prompting investors to increase their bets on central bank easing.

The dollar traded at ¥107.83, having been nudged off a 12-day high of 108.535 scaled at the start of the week.

“The dollar fell below ¥108.00 again in light of BoE Governor Carney's dovish comments, which helped depress global bond yields,” said Shinichiro Kadota, senior strategist at Barclays in Tokyo.

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“Yields declined as the BoE, up until now, was seen as the only central bank which was not as dovish as others.”

The euro was little changed at US$1.1291 following a volatile session yesterday, when it swung between a low of US$1.1275 and a high of US$1.1322.

The common currency had received a lift after a media report that European Central Bank policymakers are in no rush to cut interest rates at a July policy meeting. But it later slipped after IMF managing director Christine Lagarde, perceived as a policy dove, was nominated as the next ECB president.

The Australian dollar was flat at US$0.6992 after gaining about 0.4 per cent the previous day. The Aussie had gained after the Reserve Bank of Australian cut interest rates but offered a more balanced outlook.

The 10-year US Treasury yield extended an overnight fall and brushed a fresh 2-1/2-year low of 1.965 per cent.

At the G20 summit in Japan last weekend, Washington and Beijing agreed to restart trade talks after US President Donald Trump offered concessions.

But investors were wary about the chances of a resolution to the year-long trade war between the world's two biggest economies, especially given the recent breakdown in talks and Trump's comments that any deal would have to be tilted in US's favour. Sentiment was also dented by Washington's threat of tariffs on US$4 billion of additional European Union goods in a long-running dispute over aircraft subsidies. ― Reuters