Dollar falls on reduced fears over protracted strike on Syria
FILE PHOTO: U.S. Dollar and Japan Yen notes are seen in this picture illustration June 2, 2017. REUTERS/Thomas White/Illustration/File Photo
By Richard Leong
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The dollar fell broadly on Monday on hopes that a U.S.-led strike on Syria would not lead to escalation, rekindling some appetite for stocks and other risky assets and spurring investors to reduce safe-haven holdings of the greenback.
Government data that showed a rebound in U.S. store sales in March failed to lift the dollar, which has been pressured by concerns over a trade war between the United States and China, the world's two biggest economies.
"The action may be more limited than previously thought and that's helped market sentiment," Eric Viloria, currency strategist at Wells Fargo Securities in Stamford, Connecticut, said of a weekend missile strike against Syria.
The United States, Britain and France said their bombing was aimed at three chemical weapons facilities in retaliation for a suspected poison gas attack in Douma by the Assad regime.
For now, the three Western nations signaled there will be no further strikes.
The MSCI world equity index <.MIWD00000PUS>, which tracks shares in 45 nations, rose 0.51 percent, to 513.12.
An index that tracks the dollar against a basket of six currencies <.DXY> fell 0.39 percent, to 89.452. The dollar index hit a two-week low of 89.355 last week.
Despite widening interest rate differentials in its favor and the widest yield gap between two-year U.S. and German debt
That is because although the U.S. central bank has kept on track in raising interest rates, broader financial conditions remained loose.
"In any case, we continue to expect healthy economic growth and positive returns for risky assets, so the dollar’s flight-to-quality attributes should not be a central driver for the time being," Goldman Sachs strategists Zach Pandl and Lorenzo Incoronato wrote in a research note.
In a wider measure of dollar positioning
The U.S. Treasury semi-annual report released late on Friday did not jolt the currency markets, with the Trump administration again refraining from naming any major trading partners as currency manipulators as it pursues potential tariffs and negotiations to try to cut a massive trade deficit with China. [W1N10G016]
Sterling was an exception. It gained 0.6 percent, rising above $1.43
(Additional reporting by Saikat Chatterjee in LONDON,; Shinichi Saoshiro in TOKYO; Editing by Susan Thomas and Dan Grebler)
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