FOREX-Battered dollar steadies but investors brace for more tariff volatility

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Dollar recovers from tumble but still weak
*
Confusion over Trump's tariff policy continues
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Euro, Swiss franc ease after surging last week
By
Investors braced for another volatile week as Trump's imposition and abrupt postponement of tariffs on goods imported to the U.S. continued to sow confusion.
Currency markets held largely steady after the
"At this point in time ... it's been handled haphazardly,
heavy-handedly and with weight, and those measures have created
a great deal of uncertainty," said IG market analyst
"Those storm clouds, they're still circling, they haven't gone anywhere."
The dollar was last up 0.34% against the Swiss franc , having fallen to a decade-low on Friday and clocking its worst week against the Swissy in more than two years.
The euro fell 0.13% to
"I think we could see the euro trading at
Growing nervousness among investors in owning U.S. assets
has caused some to dump those positions and move money into
markets including
Elsewhere, the yen fell 0.2% to 143.79 per dollar,
while sterling slid 0.33% to
The Australian dollar was up 0.15% to
Against a basket of currencies, the U.S. dollar last stood at 99.73, not far from Friday's three-year low.
"The market is re-assessing the structural attractiveness of the dollar as the world's global reserve currency and is undergoing a process of rapid de-dollarisation," George Saravelos, global head of FX research at Deutsche Bank, wrote in a client note.
"Nowhere is this more evident than the continued and combined collapse in the currency and U.S. bond market."
A steep sell-off in the U.S. Treasury market last week, owing in part to a rapid unwinding of so-called basis trades by hedge funds, was a huge drag on the dollar.
Early on Monday, there was scant sign of any recovery in bonds with 10-year yields at 4.47% having seen the largest weekly rise in borrowing costs in decades.
"We think the process of de-dollarisation has more to go, but we are keeping a very open mind as to how this process plays out and what the ultimate new equilibrium in the global financial architecture will be," said Saravelos.
In other currencies, the
The offshore yuan fell 0.17% to 7.2941 per dollar ahead of the open of trade in the onshore market later on Monday.
The offshore unit struck a record low last week while its
onshore counterpart sank to its lowest since 2007 as
the trade war between
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