Investing.com - The US dollar slipped lower Tuesday, heading towards a one-week low following a report that President-elect Donald Trump's tariffs could be less aggressive, while the euro gains ahead of key inflation data.
At 04:25 ET (09:25 GMT), the Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six other currencies, traded 0.3% lower to 107.775, after falling overnight to its weakest since Dec. 30.
Dollar remains on backfoot
The dollar has been on the backfoot since the Washington Post (NYSE:POST) released a report on Monday stating that the new Trump administration was exploring plans to limit tariffs to sectors seen as critical to US national or economic security.
President-elect Donald Trump has denied the report in a post on his Truth Social platform, but the dollar has still struggled to make headway.
“The dollar’s failure to recover all its intraday losses on Monday likely indicates two factors: first, the market had been heavily favoring the dollar following a nearly continuous three-month rally; second, a view that there is no smoke without fire and that the contents of that Washington Post report sounded sensible,” said analysts at ING, in a note.
There is a lot of US economic data to digest Tuesday, including ISM non-manufacturing PMI for December and the November JOLTS job openings, ahead of Friday's release of the closely watched US jobs report for further clarity on the health of the world's largest economy.
“It is unlikely investors will want to consider actively selling the dollar ahead of Trump's inauguration on 20 January on speculation over softer tariffs – but we could see a little more rebalancing of FX positioning and a little more dollar consolidation in the interim,” ING added.
Euro climbs ahead of inflation data
In Europe, EUR/USD rose 0.4% to 1.0431, climbing once more after jumping to a one-week high on Monday.
Attention turns Tuesday to the release of the latest inflation data out of the eurozone - the last data on regional prices before the European Central Bank's next meeting on Jan. 30.
The eurozone consumer inflation index for December is expected to have risen 2.4% in December on an annual basis, speeding up from 2.2% in November.
However, data released from Spain and Germany showed faster-than-expected pickups in inflation, while France surprised to the downside.
Investors are currently looking for the ECB to ease interest rates by around 100 basis points in the first half of 2025, and any signs that inflation is easing further would give the ECB scope to loosen policy more, weighing on the single currency.
GBP/USD traded 0.4% higher to 1.2569, following sharp gains overnight, despite data showing British house prices dropped unexpectedly last month for the first time since March.
Mortgage lender Halifax said house prices fell 0.2% in December after a 1.2% rise in November, and were 3.3% higher on the year - lower than the 4.2% expected.
The Bank of England held interest rates unchanged last month after consumer prices rose above target, and is expected to proceed cautiously with further rate cuts this year.
Yuan remains weak
In Asia, USD/CNY rose 0.1% to 7.3325, with the Chinese currency continuing to underperform, hitting its weakest level in 17 years on Monday.
While the currency did recover some ground, it remained fragile, with new US. restrictions against Chinese companies adding more pressure on the currency.
USD/JPY slipped slightly to 157.56, after earlier hitting its highest level in nearly six months.