FOREX-Dovish Fed spurs dollar's biggest two-day drop in a year

FOREX-Dovish Fed spurs dollar's biggest two-day drop in a year
FOREX-Dovish Fed spurs dollar's biggest two-day drop in a year

* Graphic: World FX rates in 2019 http://tmsnrt.rs/2egbfVh (Recasts; updates prices; adds analyst quote; changes dateline, previous LONDON)

By Kate Duguid

NEW YORK, June 20 (Reuters) - The U.S. dollar sank against its rivals on Thursday, putting it on track for its biggest two-day drop in a year after the Federal Reserve signaled it was ready to cut interest rates as early as next month.

The Fed joined global peers such as the European Central Bank and the Reserve Bank of Australia this week in signaling that more policy stimulus is needed to maintain growth. That fueled a rally in higher-yielding currencies such as the Australian dollar and the Korean won.

"Certainly the market has taken this as a dovish turn and as a reason to sell dollars," said Lee Ferridge, head of macro strategy for North America at State Street.

"The theme of the day is going to stay with the dollar under pressure."

The dollar fell 0.43% against a basket of its rivals to 96.70, putting it on course for its biggest two-day losing streak since February 2018.

It also retreated to a six-month low against the Japanese yen at 107.45, though it had retraced some of those losses early in the North American session.

The sharp fall in the dollar took currency markets by surprise and forced some hedge funds that had built up large long-dollar bets before the rate decision to dump the greenback.

It came under additional pressure after benchmark 10-year Treasury yields slid to their lowest level in 2-1/2 years.

The widespread dollar weakness boosted appetite for risk-oriented currencies, with the euro barreling past the $1.13 line to a one-week high while the Australian dollar and the New Zealand dollar gained more than 0.5% each.

Although the dollar looks weaker in the short term, some investors were skeptical the trend would last.

For "the high-beta currencies - the Aussie dollar, the Kiwi, the Canadian dollar - and the EM currencies, I would be wary of moving into this and thinking this trend is going to last. For the Fed to deliver what the market is pricing in, things have to get worse, and that's bad for high-beta and EM," Ferridge said.

The overnight drop in global bond yields has boosted interest rate cut bets across global markets, with money markets pricing in three Fed rate before the end of the year and as many as five cuts until mid-2020.

"Yes, (Powell) opened the door to a July cut. That's pretty much a done deal. But he didn't set the groundwork for the other cuts the market was expecting," Ferridge said. (Reporting by Kate Duguid and Saikat Chatterjee Editing by Paul Simao)

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