LONDON, July 4 — The euro flattened today, staying near a five-year low against the US dollar, as investors sought safety in the greenback amid worries about slowing global growth.

The war in Ukraine and its economic fallout, in particular soaring food and energy inflation, has been a major drag on the euro, which has weakened more than 8 per cent against the dollar this year. The difference between the European Central Bank and the US Federal Reserve response to higher inflation has also weighed on the euro.

Data on Friday showed euro zone inflation surging to another record, adding to the case for the ECB to raise interest rates this month. Read full story Jeremy Stretch, head of G10 FX strategy at CIBC said he expected headwinds on the euro to persist as the ECB is set to hike rates on July 21 by “a mere 25 basis point”.

“ECB action remains moderate when compared with a 75bps Fed hike,” he said. “Beyond ECB monetary policy discussion, the primary European Union risk variable relates to the energy sector.”

Advertisement

The euro was flat at US$1.0423 (RM4.60) today, barely above May’s five-year trough of US$1.0349.

Global recession fears have kept the dollar elevated even if markets have scaled back their US rate hike expectations. The market is pricing in around an 85 per cent chance of another hike of 75 basis points this month and rates at 3.25 per cent to 3.5 per cent by year end — before cuts in 2023.

The US dollar index rose 0.1 per cent to 105.140, not far below last month’s two-decade high of 105.790.

Advertisement

Trade is likely to be light ahead of Monday’s Independence Day holiday in the United States.

The Australian and New Zealand dollars, as well as the Swedish crown, hit two-year lows on Friday and were not far from those levels today.

“The Aussie and other commodity currencies and even euro and sterling will likely decline even more into the week, given markets currently are super-focused on the risk of a sharp slowdown in the global economy,” said Carol Kong, a currency strategist at the Commonwealth Bank of Australia in Sydney.

Sterling hit a two-week low of US$1.1976 on Friday and last bought US$1.21170.

Looking ahead to the rest of the week, investors are awaiting publication of minutes from last month’s Fed meeting on Wednesday and US employment data on Friday.

Australia’s central bank will meet tomorrow and markets have priced in a 40 basis point (bp) rise in interest rates. The Aussie may not catch much of a boost if a hike of that size, or thereabouts, is delivered. — Reuters