(Recasts to add impact of oil prices; adds analyst quotes)
By Kate Duguid and Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss
NEW YORK, Sept 17 (Reuters) - The U.S. dollar fell on
Tuesday in range-bound trading on the eve of an expected
interest rate cut by the Federal Reserve, weakened by a fall in
oil prices and a stronger euro.
Oil prices dropped about 6% on Tuesday after Saudi Arabia's
energy minister said the kingdom had fully restored its oil
production, following an attack over the weekend that shut down
5% of global oil output. That reversed some of the dollar's
gains on Monday when investors rushed into safe-haven assets.
The euro was up 0.59% at $1.1065 EUR= , after an
influential survey showed a brightening in German investor
confidence. The ZEW index improved to -22.5 in September versus
forecasts of -37 and the August reading of -44.1. Thierry Wizman, global interest rates and currencies
strategist at Macquarie Group, said he was seeing a bid in the
forex market. "It's maybe why the euro is doing a little better
here," he said. "You also had some good data in Europe as well
that has sparked a bit of this euro rally today too."
While many investors are expecting the Fed to announce a 25
basis point rate cut following the close of its two-day policy
meeting on Wednesday, some believe it may be the last rate cut
for a while absent more evidence of a U.S. economic slowdown.
"If the Fed does cut 25 basis points, then we think it will
be the last time until we really do see signs of recession,"
Brown Brothers Harriman strategists said in a note.
Against a basket of its rivals .DXY , the greenback was
0.35% lower to 98.266.
The overnight rate, or the cost for banks and Wall Street
dealers to borrow dollars USONRP= , surged to 10% on Tuesday,
the highest level since at least January 2003, according to
Refinitiv data.
Analysts attributed quarterly corporate tax payments and
settlement of $78 billion in Treasury debt supply for the spike
on Monday in interest rates in the repurchase agreement market.
"This morning's funding squeeze has put some upward pressure
earlier in the dollar, but that is not likely to be a
longer-term driver," said Erik Nelson, currency strategist, at
Wells Fargo Securities in New York.
Dollar positions https://tmsnrt.rs/302mqb3
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