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By The euro was set for weekly gains with the GfK institute survey bringing some relief, showing on Friday that German consumer sentiment is expected to stabilise next month with the help of energy measures. Risk-sensitive sterling was near a three-month high against the U.S. currency. "We've still got the third successive day of positive risk
sentiment ... I think that is keeping the U.S. dollar subdued
pretty much across the board," said Against a basket of currencies, the U.S. dollar index
stood at 106.06, edging up 0.2% on the day, after thin trading
on Thursday due to the U.S. Minutes from the Fed's November meeting released earlier this week showed that a "substantial majority" of policymakers agreed it would soon be appropriate to slow the pace of interest rate rises. Those remarks sent the dollar tumbling as the Fed's aggressive rate increases and market expectations of how high the central bank could take them has been a big driver of the currency's 10% surge this year. Supporting the dollar index, the Japanese yen
slipped 0.5% on the day to 139.40 to the dollar, with core
consumer prices in The Fed aside, accounts of the European Central Bank's October meeting released overnight showed that policymakers fear that inflation may be becoming entrenched in the euro zone. While the ECB firmly committed to further rate rises, markets are now expecting a more modest 50 basis point move at the December meeting. Against the dollar, the euro eased 0.1% to
The The offshore Chinese yuan fell 0.25% to 7.1870 to the dollar and was headed for a second weekly loss, as COVID worries continued to weigh.
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