Business & Economy
U.S Dollar Gains Further, As Global Geopolitical Climate Worsens
The U.S dollar ends on a good gained on Friday’s trading session, gaining 0.07% against the majority of other currencies that close at 97.460.
Stephen Innes, Chief Global Market Strategist at AxiCorp, in an email sent to Nairametrics, speaks on the worsening geopolitical climate around the world with the resurgence of COVID-19 cases.
Innes said: “The transmission from the incredible policy support offered up by central banks and governments alike to the real economy will be dotted with potholes but the resurgence of Covid-19 has transformed those potholes into craters.”
U.S dollar Gains
Why tracking the U.S dollar Index helps: Individuals hoping to meet foreign exchange payment obligations, and process transactions via the dollar to countries like England, France, or Japan, will need to pay fewer dollars for such transactions.
The American Dollar Index tracks the dollar’s strength relatively against a bouquet of other major currencies around the world, such as Japanese yen, Euro, British pounds sterling, Swedish krona, Canadian dollar, Swiss Franc, etc.
READ: U.S Dollar Suffers Against Major Currencies, Investors In Confusion
COVID-19 cases across America rose to at least 39,818 on Thursday, the largest one-day increase of the COVID-19 pandemic recorded, with Texas, America’s energy powerhouse, becoming the new hot spot for the pandemic.
“There’s an inverse correlation between the risk sentiment and the dollar,” Erik Bregar, head of FX strategy, at Exchange Bank of Canada said in a note to Reuters. “Whenever we get headlines that hurt risk sentiment that helps the dollar,” Erik Bregar added.
The American currency continues to attract global investors and currency traders in the wake of renewed market uncertainty, however, it’s very likely that any rebound seems to be a good selling opportunity.