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FOREX-Dollar flat, yuan falls ahead of new tariffs this weekend

Published 30/08/2019, 15:45
© Reuters.  FOREX-Dollar flat, yuan falls ahead of new tariffs this weekend
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(Recasts throughout; changes dateline, previous LONDON)

By Kate Duguid

NEW YORK, Aug 30 (Reuters) - The U.S. dollar index was flat

on Friday morning, with the offshore Chinese yuan headed toward

its biggest monthly decline in 25 years as the two countries

prepared for the implementation of new retaliatory tariffs on

Sunday.

The index .DXY was 0.02% lower at 98.483, closing the

month virtually unchanged after having been whipped around by

trade headlines. Against the dollar, the offshore yuan CNH=

was 0.2% weaker at 7.157, set for a 3.6% fall in August, it's

biggest monthly drop since 1994.

An additional 5% tariff on $125 billion of goods from China

is slated to kick in on Sunday, affecting consumer items from

smart speakers to sneakers. Investors fear the intensifying

trade dispute could lead the U.S. economy into recession.

But on Friday, trade fears were subdued after the two

countries on Thursday discussed upcoming face-to-face

negotiations in September and China declined to comment on

whether it would respond in kind to President Donald Trump's

latest round of tariffs.

The U.S. dollar has remained afloat amidst the trade war.

"Regardless of what the Trump team wants for the buck, it

will continue to rise as long as the global economy sinks. That

is a natural function of currency markets to pull money back

into the U.S. when the global economy is reeling. Capital flows

are mobile, and the primary source of USD demand is not

foreigners - it's U.S. investors cutting exposure outside the

U.S.," said Mark McCormick (NYSE:MKC), global head of foreign exchange

strategy at TD Securities.

Also supporting the dollar was a report on Friday that U.S.

consumer spending increased solidly in July as households bought

a range of goods and services. But while that may allay some

recession fears, the strong pace of consumption is unlikely to

be sustained amid tepid income gains. The Japanese yen was last up 0.34% and is on track for its

biggest monthly gain in three months, as safe-haven assets have

been buoyed by the U.S.-China conflict. The gains were partly

fueled by a global rally in government debt, with yields in

major developed markets pushing deeper into negative territory.

The "trade war thus far caused lower rates, not recession,"

wrote Bank of America Merrill Lynch (NYSE:BAC) strategists.

Elsewhere, the pound GBP= stabilized despite the growing

probability that Britain will exit the European Union on Oct. 31

without a deal.

The Canadian dollar CAD= strengthened against its U.S.

counterpart on Friday after data showing stronger-than-expected

GDP growth, but analysts doubted the Bank of Canada would become

more optimistic about the economy's outlook at next week's

policy announcement.

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