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* ECB's Lagarde says negative rates to end soon * Dollar drops across the board, follows sell-off last week * Aussie adds 1%, but election reaction limited (Adds Lagarde comments, new quote, latest prices, chart) A calmer mood on equity markets in European trading also pressured the dollar, which fell sharply last week but has been the go-to currency for investors this year when risk assets tumbled and worries about the economy and inflation jumped. The euro was the big gainer, adding as much as 1.1% to
ECB President The euro's rally came as the dollar fell broadly, with a sell-off that began accelerating last week. "We see this as just a temporary correction (in the U.S.
dollar) for now. If we look at the main reasons why the dollar
has been strengthening so much in recent months, we don't think
that fundamental story has changed significantly over the past
week," said MUFG analyst "But in the very short term there is a risk that this correction lower could extend further," he added, pointing to a build-up in long dollar positions in recent weeks that leaves the market vulnerable. The U.S. dollar index, up about 16% to a two-decade high to 105.01 over the 12 months to the middle of May, fell 0.8% on Monday to 102.15. The Australian dollar, which initially showed a muted
reaction to the victory for the centre-left Labor Party in
national elections at the weekend, climbed 1% to The Japanese yen rose to The euro also rose 0.3% versus the Swiss franc to Sentiment around The yuan had its best week since late 2020 last week and in offshore markets on Monday firmed to 6.6542 per dollar , its strongest since early May. Geopolitics are also in focus in Commodity-linked currencies climbed, with the Norwegian crown up 0.5% versus the euro and the Canadian dollar rising by a similar amount. The U.S. dollar has soared this year but with expectations for repeated Federal Reserve interest rate hikes priced in, some analysts say further gains may be tougher from here. Others say the macroeconomic backdrop still points to more downside for the euro, however. "The "As inflation soars globally and lockdowns choke off growth
in (Reporting by
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