By Tom Westbrook
SINGAPORE (Reuters) – A firm dollar kept riskier currencies under pressure on Monday, as a surge in coronavirus cases and the re-imposition of curbs to stop its spread had investors worried that a global economic recovery could be derailed even before it had taken root.
California ordered some bars to close on Sunday, following similar moves in Texas and Florida, as cases nationwide soar to record levels each day. Washington state and the city of San Francisco have paused re-opening plans.
That allowed the greenback to hang on to gains ground out last week, and had riskier currencies such as the trade-exposed Australian and New Zealand dollars parked toward the bottom of ranges they have held for several weeks. [AUD/]
The Aussie
Against a basket of currencies the dollar was steady not far below a four-week peak on Monday at 97.466. The safe-haven Japanese yen
“A double-dip U.S. recession is possible if widespread restrictions are re-imposed, leading to a surge in the dollar,” said Commonwealth Bank of Australia FX analyst Joe Capurso.
“Lockdowns are the key indicator to watch.”
The jump in U.S. cases has been most pronounced in a handful of Southern and Western states that reopened earlier and more aggressively, serving as a warning to the potentially illusory nature of perceived progress in controlling the virus.
New restrictions on movement have also been imposed in parts of Beijing and Lisbon and in two municipalities in western Germany. Argentina extended and tightened a lockdown around Buenos Aires following a sharp rise in cases.
Globally half a million people have died from COVID-19, about a quarter them in the United States.
Elsewhere sterling
The euro
Investors are looking to eurozone confidence data due at 0900 GMT and German inflation figures at 1200 GMT for the latest gauge of the region’s economic health.
“Given the euro area’s high (sensitivity) to global trade, we expect more global uncertainty around the pandemic to keep any upside capped,” ANZ bank analysts said in a note.
Later in the week Europe-wide inflation data is due, along with Chinese composite purchasing managers’ index numbers and the minutes from the June meeting of the U.S. Federal Reserve.
Graphic: World FX rates in 2020 https://graphics.reuters.com/GLOBAL-CURRENCIES-PERFORMANCE/0100301V041/index.html
(Reporting by Tom Westbrook; Editing by Shri Navaratnam)