* Oil surge, dire U.S. data help dollar higher
* Dollar set to gain about 2% for the week, best since
mid-March
* U.S. payrolls eyed at 1230 GMT
* Graphic: World FX rates in 2020 https://tmsnrt.rs/2RBWI5E
By Tom Westbrook
SINGAPORE, April 3 (Reuters) - The dollar edged toward an
almost 2% weekly rise on Friday, boosted by a surge in the oil
price and as investors sought safety amid the worsening economic
fallout from the coronavirus pandemic.
The gains consolidate the dollar's strength after a
topsy-turvy end to last month, which had the dollar soaring in a
scramble for cash, then slumping as the U.S. Federal Reserve
flooded the market with liquidity.
The largest ever daily gain in crude oil prices helped the
greenback to its best day in two weeks against the euro
overnight, since the United States is the world's top oil and
gas producer.
It held that ground to stand at $1.0838 per euro EUR= on
Friday - ahead 2.7% for the week. Against a basket of currencies
=USD the dollar is up 1.8% for the week so far at 100.210, its
best performance since mid-March.
Moves in Asian trade were slight since traders are bracing
for bad news when monthly U.S. payrolls data is published at
1230 GMT.
The coronavirus pandemic is worsening in the United States
and as lockdowns extend, weekly jobless claims already soared to
a massive 6.6 million last week. The dollar was firmer against most other major currencies,
last trading at $0.6054 per Australian dollar AUD=D3 , $0.5903
per New Zealand dollar NZD=D3 and $1.2376 per pound GBP= .
It bought 108.00 Japanese yen JPY= .
"The U.S. labour market has more or less collapsed," said
Commonwealth Bank of Australia currency analyst Joe Capurso.
"The increase in the dollar because of the poor U.S.
economic data reflects the dollar's status as a counter-cyclical
currency. It lifts when the global economy deteriorates, even
if the deterioration in the global economy is the U.S."
CBA forecasts a 200,000 drop in employment, higher than the
median estimate of a 100,000 drop according to a Reuters' survey
of economists - though like most, they expect far worse to come
as the data catches up to the damage in the real economy.
Global coronavirus cases surpassed 1 million on Thursday,
with more than 52,000 deaths as the pandemic spread further in
the United States and the death toll climbed in Spain and Italy,
according to a Reuters tally of official data. Japanese bank Nomura expects the world economy contracted
18% in the first quarter, on an annualised basis, and is
tracking toward shrinking 4% in 2020. The overnight 21% surge in the price of crude oil futures
LCOc1 to $29.94 gave fleeting support to commodity currencies,
especially the oil-exposed Norwegian krone NOK= , which hit a
three-week high, and Canadian dollar CAD=D3 . O/R
Flows out of just about every asset in emerging markets in
to the dollar continue, with MSCI's emerging market currency
index .MIEM00000CUS sitting not far above three-year lows
touched last month. EMRG/FRX
"Until the virus peaks, we anticipate the selling pressure
will prevail and capital outflows will continue, although the
biggest wave may have occurred in March," said Piotr Matys,
senior emerging markets FX Strategist at Rabobank in London.
"If a synchronised global recession transforms into
depression, then all bets will be off."