SINGAPORE (REUTERS)
The dollar eased on Wednesday after private-sector US jobs data stoked worries about the health of the labour market, with investors also bracing for an imminent US government reopening that is expected to unleash a backlog of economic releases.
Overnight, payroll processor ADP said that US firms were shedding more than 11,000 jobs a week through late October, underscoring how hiring trends are evolving on a week-to-week basis and pointing to further weakening in a labour market being closely monitored by Federal Reserve policymakers.
The dollar fell in the aftermath of the data release and struggled to recover its losses in early Asia trade on Wednesday, as traders once again ramped up bets of a Fed cut in December.
The euro was steady at $1.1586 and sterling distanced itself further from a seven-month trough to last trade $1.3149.
Against a basket of currencies, the dollar languished near its lowest in more than a week and was last at 99.46.
Traders are now pricing in close to a 68% chance that the Fed would ease rates by 25 basis points next month, up from around 62% a day ago, according to the CME FedWatch tool.
The benchmark 10-year US Treasury yield was down 3 bps at 4.0791% early in Asia, after trading was closed in the US on Tuesday owing to the Veterans Day holiday. The two-year yield also fell roughly 3 bps to 3.5596%.
Fed policymakers have in recent times struck a more measured tone on further easing, citing the absence of key economic data due to the US government shutdown as one reason for caution.
But a reopening could be imminent, as members of the House of Representatives headed back to Washington on Tuesday for a vote that could bring the longest shutdown in history to a close.
The breakthrough has also lifted risk currencies like the Australian and New Zealand dollars, which were last up 0.02% each at $0.6529 and $0.5656, respectively.
The safe-haven yen has meanwhile been bruised from the overall risk-on market sentiment, last standing at 154.08 per dollar after sliding to a nine-month low of 154.495 in the previous session.
It has fallen nearly 0.5% for the week so far.
The yen also faced further headwinds from expectations of greater fiscal largesse in Japan, after Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi said she would work on setting a new fiscal target extending through several years to allow more flexible spending, essentially watering down the country's commitment to fiscal consolidation.
She renewed calls for the Bank of Japan to go slow on interest rate hikes, in sharp contrast to the hawkish tilt from Fed policymakers.