NEW YORK (UK) – The dollar gained on Monday, with the euro struggling below $1.18 and commodity currencies falling. The currency attracted some safe-haven bids on concerns about the likely fallout of a hedge fund’s default on margin calls.
The dollar index, a measure of the greenback’s value against six other major currencies, hit as high as 92.919, its strongest level since November last year. It was last marginally up at 92.825.
US stocks traded lower after global banks said they faced potential losses from a hedge fund’s default, identified as Archegos Capital, which analysts said was tied to big US media and Chinese tech companies.
“Focus today is on how US equities perform, especially given the hedge fund default that came out last week,” said Simon Harvey, senior FX market analyst at Monex Europe in London.
Harvey, however, said the Archegos impact remained limited for now, given that the effect was concentrated on a few companies. But some analysts said the fallout could spread further and weigh on other markets.
The euro, meanwhile, struggled on Monday as the prospect of tougher coronavirus curbs in France and Germany dimmed the short-term outlook for the European economy.
The single European currency slipped 0.1% to $1.1778, not far from last week’s four-and-a-half-month trough of $1.1762. On a monthly basis, it was down 2.3%, its biggest drop since July 2019.
Compounding the euro’s woes have been the widening differentials between German and US yields. The spread for 10-year debt widened to 200 basis points from 150 basis points at the start of the year, boosting the dollar.
“The US economy is much stronger and miles ahead in the immunization game compared to Europe’s and Japan’s, and this ultimately translates into the Fed normalising policy years before the ECB or the BoJ,” said Marios Hadjikyriacos, a strategist at brokerage XM.
Weekly positioning data showed the broad trend of growing dollar bullishness remained in play. Hedge funds cut their overall short dollar bets to their lowest levels since June 2020 while ramping up their bearish bets on the yen.
Short yen positions have grown in recent weeks with hedge funds building their net short bets to 33% of open interest, according to ING data.
Steadying stock markets offered some support for the yen, but falling bond yields and expectations of a global economic rebound have rekindled short bets. The yen is among the worst- performing currencies so far this quarter, down 6% against the dollar.
The dollar was last up 0.1% against the Japanese currency at 109.74 yen.
Virus-driven caution also helped the dollar higher against the Australian and New Zealand dollars and sterling, and it rose against oil-linked currencies as the re-floating of the ship blocking the Suez Canal pushed crude prices down by about 1.5%.
The Aussie was last down 0.1% at US$0.7636 on Monday and the New Zealand dollar was slightly down at US$0.7002. Sterling slipped to $1.3790.