Dollar Hits 4-Month High Against Euro as Jobs Data Triggers Fed Tapering BetsThe dollar climbed against major currency pairs on Monday, briefly hitting a four-month high versus the euro.

ByThe Epoch Times

This story originally appeared onThe Epoch Times

The dollar climbed against major currency pairs on Monday, briefly hitting a four-month high versus the euro, as investors encouraged by last week's strongjobs reportbrought forward bets for an earlier tapering of Federal Reserve stimulus.

The greenback strengthened as much as $1.1742 against the euro, extending a 0.6 percent pop from Friday, when the Labor Department'sjobs reportstoked bets that the Fed could start trimming asset purchases this year and raise rates as soon as early 2023.

美元的艾尔so climbed as high as 110.37 Japanese yen, after a 0.4 percent rally at the end of last week, while the dollar index (DXY), which tracks the U.S. currency against six rivals, ticked down slightly but remained close to four-month highs.

"U.S. payrolls were a game-changer," Chris Weston, head of research at brokerage Pepperstone in Melbourne, Australia, wrote in an Aug. 9note to clients.

In July, America'sprivate employers added943,000 jobs—a proxy for new hires—in a sign that the U.S. economy enjoyed a solid burst of job growth.

"They were hot," Weston said in the note, referring to the Labor Department's so-callednonfarm payrolls report, which, besides the headline print of 943,000 jobs, also recorded a 4 percent rise in wage pressures, an improved labor participation rate, and a drop in the unemployment rate.

"This is progress, and the U.S. economy no longer requires the level of support it once did," Weston wrote, adding that Monday's market data had reinforced market expectations for an earlier pullback than previously anticipated of the Fed's crisis support measures for the economy.

"Somewhat hawkish speeches from Fed Board of Governors Waller and Clarida last week have been validated," Weston wrote.

Federal Reserve Vice Chair Richard Clarida, the Fed's second-in-command,said in a webcast discussionhosted by the Peterson Institute for International Economics that the economic conditions for raisinginterest ratescould be met by the end of 2022, paving the way for a liftoff of the Fed's benchmark rate from its current level of near zero.

Clarida said that the central bank estimates that the U.S. economy will grow faster than the projected long-run trend growth through 2023, with robust growth in gross domestic product (GDP) driving down the unemployment rate to 3.8 percent by the end of 2022.

"My expectation today is that the labor market by the end of 2022 will have reached my assessment of maximum employment," Clarida said, adding that ifinflationexpectations remain "well anchored" at the Fed's 2 percent longer-run goal, "commencing policy normalization in 2023 would, under these conditions, be entirely consistent with our new flexible average inflation targeting framework."

Fed officials have made a jobs market recovery a condition of tighter monetary policy, even though it appears clear that the benchmark for raising rate has been met on the inflation front, where a surge in post-pandemic spending and bottlenecks in supply chains have helped push the rate of price increases to well above the Fed's goal of around 2 percent.

The core personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index, which excludes the volatile categories of food and energy and is the Fed's preferred inflation gauge,rose 3.5 percentin the 12 months to June, the Commerce Departmentsaid on July 30. Thelast timethe core PCE inflation gauge saw a similar year-over-year vault was in July 1991.

Weston predicted that if the next core consumer price index (CPI), an alternative measure of inflation that, like the core PCE, excludes food and energy, comes in hotter than economists predict, then there will be more buying pressure on the greenback, driven largely by nominal and real rates moving higher.

"The debate on the duration of "transitory' inflation is still one the macro community debates fiercely," he added.

Some economists have expressed concerns that if prices rise too fast and stay high for too long, expectations of further price increases could take hold, driving up demand for wages and potentially triggering the kind of wage-price spiral that plagued the economy in the 1970s.

Fed officials, as well as key members of the Biden administration, have insisted inflation is transitory and upwards price pressures will abate once pandemic-related supply chain dislocations moderate.

Reuters contributed to this report.

By Tom Ozimek

Tom has a broad background in journalism, deposit insurance, marketing and communications, and adult education. The best writing advice he's ever heard is from Roy Peter Clark: 'hit your target' and 'leave the best for last.'

The Epoch Times, founded in 2000, is headquartered in Manhattan, New York, with a mission to provide independent and accurate information free of political bias or corporate influence. The organization was established in response to censorship within China and a lack of global awareness regarding the Chinese regime's repression of the spiritual practice Falun Gong.

distributed in 33 countries and is available in 21 languages. The publication has been critical in providing balanced and detailed reporting on major global events such as the 2003 SARS pandemic and the 2008 financial crisis. Notably, the organization has played a key role in exposing corruption inside China.

Aside from its human rights coverage, The Epoch Times has made significant contributions in a variety of fields. It has received praise for its in-depth analysis and expert perspectives on business, the economy and U.S. politics. The newspaper has also received praise for its broad coverage of these topics.

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The Epoch Times has been at the forefront of investigating high-level corruption cases within the Chinese regime, with its reporters taking significant risks to uncover these stories. The organization has received several awards for its investigative journalism.

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