TOKYO, Sept 17 — The dollar firmed against major currencies today following the US Federal Reserve’s upbeat assessment of the economic recovery and as its increased tolerance for higher inflation pushed Treasury yields higher.

At its policy meeting, the Fed pledged to keep rates near zero until at least the end of 2023 when the labour market reaches “maximum employment” and inflation is on track to “moderately exceed” the 2 per cent inflation target.

The Fed also expects economic growth to improve from the coronavirus-induced drop they projected in June.

Against six major currencies, the dollar index rose about 0.32 per cent to trade at 93.493 and changed hands at 1.1763 against the euro, which briefly hit a one-month low.

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The greenback initially fell after the Fed’s announcement and weaker-than-expected US retail sales data, but swung into positive territory after Chair Jerome Powell’s comment on the economic outlook.

Broad dollar buying followed after the benchmark 10-year US Treasury yield rose above 0.7 per cent overnight, a reaction resembling that of the Fed’s Jackson Hole symposium last month, said Mitsuo Imaizumi, chief FX strategist at Daiwa Securities.

“It’s the same reaction the market had when Fed Chair Powell introduced a new framework last month, and longer-term yields went up after the announcement. Based on the higher interest rates, I think people are feeling they won’t be able to sell the dollar,” he said.

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Analysts said there is a risk of a slowdown in economic activity unless more fiscal stimulus is provided.

“Besides the presidential election, I think the focus will be on the US fiscal support, which Powell also said is essential,” said Shinichiro Kadota, senior strategist at Barclays. “The Congress is still struggling with stimulus talks, and markets are eyeing if that would be resolved.”

Among Asian currencies, the Australian dollar briefly surged on strong jobs data but retraced its gains as the currency was swamped by a firmer dollar, last trading 0.53 per cent lower to US$0.72665 (RM3.01).

The Bank of Japan kept its monetary policy steady today and said the country’s economy “remains in a severe state but has started to pick up,” suggesting no immediate stimulus was needed to support activity.

The policy decision came after Yoshihide Suga, a long-time aide of Shinzo Abe who pledged to continue “Abenomics” to recover employment, was officially elected as Japan’s new prime minister yesterday.

Market participants will focus on BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda’s remarks about how the central bank would coordinate monetary policy with the new Suga administration.

The safe-haven Japanese yen changed hands at 105.08 against the greenback, a fraction below a 2-1/2-month high of 104.81 marked overnight.

Elsewhere, the Chinese yuan traded at 6.775 per dollar in offshore trade.

The focus for the British pound is now on Brexit tensions, following the government’s deal yesterday to avert a rebellion in Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s own party, giving parliament a say over the use of post-Brexit powers.

The pound was last at US$1.2932, after dropping more than 3.5 per cent against the greenback and the euro last week.

Against the euro, it changed hands at 0.9098 pence per euro, near a 5-1/2 month low hit earlier this week.

The Bank of England is likely to signal that it is getting ready to pump more stimulus into Britain’s coronavirus-hit economy at its policy decision due later in the day.

The kiwi traded 0.67 per cent below at US$0.6690, after data showed New Zealand fell into its deepest slump on record as the coronavirus outbreak paralysed business activity. — Reuters