AFP, Tokyo :
The dollar rose against the yen and most emerging market currencies on Monday after news that the US economy added more jobs than expected last month.
On Friday, the Labor department said the world’s top economy added 255,000 jobs in July, beating analyst forecasts for an increase of 185,000 payrolls, while also upgrading employment estimates for the prior two months.
The figures boost the likelihood of a Federal Reserve interest rate hike this year, after soft GDP data had all but taken a rise off the table.
“In terms of relative monetary policy, the US dollar will have more upside against the euro and the pound because the Bank of England is easing and the risk is ECB (European Central Bank) eases more,” Elias Haddad, a senior currency strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia, told Bloomberg News.
At the same time, “the monetary policy divergence that we’ve had last year or two years ago isn’t going to be as pronounced this year even if the Fed does raise its rate in December.”
The dollar rose against the yen and most emerging market currencies on Monday after news that the US economy added more jobs than expected last month.
On Friday, the Labor department said the world’s top economy added 255,000 jobs in July, beating analyst forecasts for an increase of 185,000 payrolls, while also upgrading employment estimates for the prior two months.
The figures boost the likelihood of a Federal Reserve interest rate hike this year, after soft GDP data had all but taken a rise off the table.
“In terms of relative monetary policy, the US dollar will have more upside against the euro and the pound because the Bank of England is easing and the risk is ECB (European Central Bank) eases more,” Elias Haddad, a senior currency strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia, told Bloomberg News.
At the same time, “the monetary policy divergence that we’ve had last year or two years ago isn’t going to be as pronounced this year even if the Fed does raise its rate in December.”