The ICE U.S. Dollar Index rose for the seventh-consecutive session Friday, boosted by rising crude-oil prices, a strong performance by U.S. stocks and the expectation that the European Central Bank will soon expand its program of asset purchases.
The dollar index, a measure of the dollar’s strength against a trade-weighted basket of six currencies, the heaviest of which is the euro, DXY, -0.13% was up 0.48% to 92.3300 Thursday.
The shared currency EURUSD, +0.10% fell to $1.175, its lowest since late 2005, around 8 a.m. Eastern time. It was valued at $1.179 in recent trade, down from $1.183 late Wednesday.
The dollar traded at USDJPY, -0.26% was at ¥119.63, compared with ¥119.16 late Wednesday in New York.
After hitting an 18-month low of around $1.503 earlier in the session, the pound GBPUSD, +0.01% recovered against the dollar, but remained slightly lower for the session, after the Bank of England left its benchmark interest rate at 0.5% and left its bond-buying stimulus program unchanged.
The pound traded at $1.51 in recent trade.
The dollar index, a measure of the dollar’s strength against a trade-weighted basket of six currencies, the heaviest of which is the euro, DXY, -0.13% was up 0.48% to 92.3300 Thursday.
The shared currency EURUSD, +0.10% fell to $1.175, its lowest since late 2005, around 8 a.m. Eastern time. It was valued at $1.179 in recent trade, down from $1.183 late Wednesday.
The dollar traded at USDJPY, -0.26% was at ¥119.63, compared with ¥119.16 late Wednesday in New York.
After hitting an 18-month low of around $1.503 earlier in the session, the pound GBPUSD, +0.01% recovered against the dollar, but remained slightly lower for the session, after the Bank of England left its benchmark interest rate at 0.5% and left its bond-buying stimulus program unchanged.
The pound traded at $1.51 in recent trade.
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