inflationary pressures are becoming more broad-based By Reuters

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© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: U.S. Dollar banknotes are seen in this illustration taken July 17, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration

By Tom Westbrook

SINGAPORE (Reuters) – The dollar was on the front foot on Thursday after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell signalled U.S. rates would likely rise further than expected, disappointing traders’ hopes for a change in tone, and shifting the focus to Friday’s jobs data.

The dollar hit a week-high of $0.9810 per euro in early Asia trade and is eying its best week in more than a month, although a Bank of England meeting and U.S. labour data loom before the close of trade in New York on Friday.

The Fed raised its benchmark funds rate by 75 basis points to 3.75-4% as widely expected. The dollar initially fell on hints in the Fed’s statement of smaller hikes ahead, but it was bid after Powell’s hawkish stance about the trajectory rates.

“Incoming data since our last meeting suggests that the ultimate level of interest rates will be higher than previously expected,” Powell told reporters, adding: “It is very premature to be thinking about pausing…we have a ways to go.”

The dollar’s gains knocked its New Zealand peer from a six-week high and back below its 50-day moving average to $0.5890. The Australian dollar fell 0.7% overnight and slipped further to a week-low of $0.6332 on Thursday. [AUD/]

“Strong hawkish messaging from the Fed chair pours cold water on premature dovish pivot expectations,” said analysts at Citi, who recommend staying long the U.S. dollar in Asia.

“This shall further embolden expectations of policy divergence with a much hawkish Fed relative to other central banks around the world. Further tightening of financial conditions shall put downward pressure on risk assets and strengthen the dollar.”

Japan’s yen was notably firm in the face of dollar gains, and has held at 147.90 per dollar, prompting speculation of possible help from official intervention.

Japan spent a record $42.8 billion propping up the yen last month via a series of unannounced yen purchases, on top of almost $20 billion spent in September. Japanese markets were closed for a holiday on Thursday, thinning Asian currency trade.

Sterling fell 0.8% on the dollar overnight to sit at $1.1378 in early deals on Thursday. Markets are priced for the BoE to deliver its biggest hike since 1989 and raise interest rates by 75 basis points later in the day.

“The risk is that the BoE maintains the current pace of tightening and delivers a 50bp hike,” said Commonwealth Bank of Australia (OTC:) analyst Kim Mundy. “A 50bp hike would be considered ‘dovish’ by market participants and can push sterling lower.”

The stood at 112.13, its highest in seven sessions. was hovering near record lows in offshore trade at 7.3408 per dollar, and other Asian currencies were under pressure.

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By Reuters