Sentences with phrase «dollar strength seen»

Not exact matches

«Oil, gold and silver will all likely see more strength due to their inverse relationship with the dollar,» Bennett says.
Broad dollar strength and a rout in commodity prices have seen the ringgit tumble to levels not seen since the Asian Financial Crisis, making it the region's Asia's worst - performing currency with losses exceeding 9 percent year - to - date.
With the continued dollar strength that we saw in this current year 2015, as we layered into additional hedges for fiscal»16 they were at less favorable rates.
This has been the driver of dollar strength since the elections, and it remains to be seen how much of this is «buy the rumor, sell the fact.»
Will the recent strength we've seen in the US Dollar continue, implying higher real interest rates and pressuring gold and silver down?
The strength of the dollar, as you can see, has historically had an inverse relationship with the price of oil.
First - order impact of more restrictive dollar - inflow into the U.S. will be seen in home sales and home prices data, although second - order effect would weigh on multifamily REITS as a sizable cohort of «involuntary renters» re-enter into the housing market as potential buyers (albeit without the balance sheet strength of Chinese buyers).
The dollar strength resulted in long liquidation in EUR, GBP, JPY, NZD, MXN, and RUB while short - covering was seen in CHF, CAD, and AUD.
The strength of the Aussie dollar kept the RBA from raising rates as the bank had unexpectedly raised rates in November and was content to see if the U.S. and European economies can overcome their current malaise.
So it's really what's going to happen in the shorter term — What kind of strength we're going to see or weakness in the U.S. dollar.
The yen is showing strength that it hasn't seen in a while thanks to a weak Japanese stock market, and the weak dollar is creating a nice scenario where the direction is pretty obvious.
While we believe the current strength in the dollar will likely persist going forward, we don't see it as a meaningful detractor from earnings growth for many companies over the long term.
The dollar strength has been ominous and obvious for everyone to see and this is beginning to take its toll on the prices of gold.
Here we can see the Dollar strength has continued as the US Dollar Index reached new highs shortly after the announcement.
A weaker dollar is a net negative with respect to overall U.S. economic strength, but it tends to boost the profitability of an investor's foreign holdings, which we've clearly seen this year.
But this shouldn't be a huge surprise — we've seen regular occurrences of growth - led dollar strength over the past 3 - 4 decades, since the US has more aggressively adopted its global growth engine role.
We saw the same theme of rebounding real estate and financials while China showed strength and in the non-leveraged segment, commodities rallied even in the face of a mildly stronger dollar index for the week.
Here are some ETFs that may continue to see strength due to continued dollar weakness and inflation fears given the latest round of Treasury purchases (with the door open for more to come in the future):
The combination of robust growth at UK practices and the relative strength of sterling against the dollar during the last financial year saw many London - based firms rise up the revenue rankings.
With the U.S. dollar gaining strength and the U.S. Federal Reserve set to hike interest rates throughout the year — which will lend another boost to the «Greenback» — the yuan's continued free fall in relation to the dollar may push the Bitcoin price up at an even higher rate than we saw in 2016.
Investors see opportunity emerging from a combination of factors, including the strength of the U.S. dollar and the potential abroad to acquire assets at below replacement cost.
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