Investing.com - The pound trimmed gains against the U.S. dollar on
Monday, but remained supported as fresh uncertainty over whether the
Federal Reserve will soon begin to taper its bond-buying program weighed
on demand for the greenback.
GBP/USD pulled away from 1.6072, the pair's highest since September 19, to hit 1.6031 during U.S. morning trade, still up 0.16%.
Cable
was likely to find support at 1.5893, the low of September 18 and
resistance at 1.6163, the high of September 18 and an eight-month high.
The
dollar found some support after New York Federal Reserve President
William Dudley defended the central bank’s decision to keep its stimulus
program unchanged last week, in comments on Monday.
Dudley said
that adjustments to the Fed’s USD85 billion-a-month asset purchase
program "need to be anchored in an assessment of how the economy is
actually performing”.
“The economy still needs the support of a very accommodative monetary policy,” Dudley added.
The
Fed said last week that it wanted to see more evidence of a sustained
economic recovery before it adjusted the scale of its bond buying
program.
The decision surprised markets, which had been expecting a modest reduction to the scale of the bank’s bond buying program.
Sterling was higher against the euro with EUR/GBP retreating 0.38%, to hit 0.8416.
The
euro came under pressure after Draghi said the European Central Bank is
ready to launch a third round of Long Term Refinancing Operations if
necessary. The comments came during testimony about the economy before
the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs in Brussels.
Earlier
Monday, data showed that manufacturing output in the euro zone was
weaker than expected this month, but this was offset by an improvement
in service sector activity.
The preliminary reading of the euro
zone manufacturing purchasing managers’ index fell to 51.1 in September
from a final reading of 51.4 in August. Analysts had expected the index
to inch up to 51.8.
No comments:
Post a Comment