Dollar at highest against euro since 2003

Federal Reserve has signalled three rate hikes for next year

Stocks have rallied and bonds have weakened since Donald Trump’s election. Photograph: Bloomberg
Stocks have rallied and bonds have weakened since Donald Trump’s election. Photograph: Bloomberg

The dollar climbed to the highest level since 2003 against the euro and gold plunged as the prospect of a steeper path for US interest rates filtered through markets. US stocks fluctuated after the worst day in two months.

The dollar extended its advance against major and emerging-market peers after the Federal Reserve’s first interest-rate hike of 2016 came with a signal of three increases next year. US 10-year yields reached the highest level in more than two years, while 30-year bunds led a decline in German securities. Gold tumbled 2.6 per cent to a 10-month low.

In Dublin, the overall Iseq was 1.1 per cent higher at mid-afternoon.

The Fed’s move marks a step in what is expected to be a shift away from global central-bank policy dominating financial markets toward a potential rise in fiscal stimulus.

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Stocks rallied

While stocks have rallied and bonds have tumbled since Donald Trump's election fuelled such expectations, the US central bank stands largely alone in actively tightening policy, a stance that's sent the dollar surging. The Bank of England kept its key rate at a record low Thursday, a week after the European Central Bank extended quantitative easing.

"At the moment it feels like going long dollar is free money, no one loses," said Stuart Bennett, head of Group-of-10 currency strategy at Banco Santander in London. "The market believes it can push for another two to three per cent relatively risk-free, a nice Christmas bonus. The market never appears to need a reason to be negative about the euro."

The dollar gained 1.1 per cent to $1.04242 per euro, the strongest since January 2003 as of early trade in New York.

Irish debt sale

Earlier, the National Treasury Management Agency sold €500 million of short-term debt, known as treasury bills.

Total bids received amounted to €1.331 billion which was 2.66 times the amount on offer. The treasury bills, which have a maturity of 12 months, were sold at a yield of minus 0.42 per cent.

(-Bloomberg)