Australia’s banking regulator looks into CBA’s jump into crypto, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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By Paulina Duran

SYDNEY, – Australia‘s banking watchdog said it was examining the regulatory implications of Commonwealth Bank‘s’s planned introduction of bitcoin trading to unsophisticated retail investors – the first bank in Australia to do so.

CBA says it would welcome a clear regulatory framework for crytpocurrencies, which are not formally regulated in Australia.

On Wednesday CBA broke banking industry ranks to match offerings from fintech firms by announcing it will become the first main-street bank in the developed world to offer a platform for retail customers to trade cryptocurrencies.

The move is forcing financial watchdogs in Australia to immediately focus on the volatile $2 trillion crypto trading industry that many argue has no intrinsic value and relies on users’ complete trust in different types of software.

A spokesman for the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) told Reuters the country’s largest lender had made the regulator aware of its plans and the authority was “examining regulatory issues that this raises”.

After a staged pilot for 2,000 people, CBA will give easy access to crypto trading in 10 assets to about a third of Australian adults already using its industry-leading mobile banking app, which also offers energy retailers discounts and carbon emission trackers.

CBA’s crypto trading service will be provided in partnership with Gemini Trust Company, one of the world’s largest crypto exchanges that was created in 2014 by the Winklevoss brothers, famous for accusing Facebook’s founder of stealing their idea.

The anti-money laundering watchdog the Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre said that it was “engaging … in relation to this new product offering” with both CBA and Gemini.

CBA says it would welcome regulatory clarity in the space, and that its product was designed with risk-mitigation and regulatory concerns front of mind for both the bank and to ensure people feel safe when using the product.

“We would really welcome regulatory clarity for crypto assets. We think it would improve the market, enhance trust and it would raise the bar in terms of customer protection,” said Sophie Gilder, Commonwealth Bank’s head of Blockchain and the bank’s project leader.

CBA’s offering will be a “a closed loop” connected to a CBA bank account, that would be monitored with cryptocurrency anti-money laundering services from Chainalysis for any potential suspicious activity.

“We’ve got complete transparency as to customer activity and can report on that to regulators when necessary,” Gilder said, which includes customary reporting to the taxation authority.

“We will not, as soon as the pilot ends, open it to everyone. It will be a more gradual process than that, which I think is appropriate considering the volatility of crypto.”

(Reporting by Paulina Duran in Sydney; Editing by Michael Perry)



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India’s forex reserves increase USD 1.9 bn to USD 642 bn, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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India’s forex reserves have increased by USD 1.919 billion to USD 642.019 billion for the week ended October 29 on a healthy increase in the currency assets and value of gold, the Reserve Bank said on Friday. The overall reserves had declined by USD 908 million to USD 640.1 billion at the end of the previous reporting week.

Foreign currency assets, a major part of the overall reserves, increased by 1.363 billion to USD 578.462 billion for the reporting week, the RBI said in the weekly data.

Expressed in dollar terms, the foreign currency assets include the effect of appreciation or depreciation of non-US units like the euro, pound and yen held in the foreign exchange reserves.

Value of the gold reserves increased by USD 572 million to USD 39.012 billion in the reporting week, the data showed.

The special drawing rights (SDRs) with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) rose by USD 17 million to USD 19.304 billion. The country’s reserve position with the IMF increased by USD 1 million to USD 5.242 billion in the reporting week, the data showed.

Also Read:

“India’s merchandise exports in October 2021 was USD 35.47 billion, an increase of 42.33 per cent over USD 24.92 billion in October 2020 and an increase of 35.21 per cent over USD 26.23 billion in October 2019,” as per an official statement.

At the interbank forex market, the rupee opened strong at 74.64 against the greenback and later gained strength to settle at 74.46, a level not seen since October 5. The local unit moved in a range of 74.46 to 74.64 in the day trade.

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Muthoot Finance logs 8% increase in net profit to Rs 1002.9 crore

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The finance company, which also operates home loan, micro-finance and insurance broking subsidiaries, said net profit of the gold loan division increased 11 % YoY to Rs 994 crore ,and the share in the consolidated profit stands at 99%.

NBFC Muthoot Finance on Thursday reported a 8% year-on-year (y-o-y) increase in its second quarter consolidated net profit to Rs 1002.9 crore, mainly driven by good performance of the gold loan division.

The Kerala-based lender had reported a consolidated net profit of Rs 930.7 crore in the year-ago period and a net profit of Rs 978.6 crore in the preceding first quarter..

The finance company, which also operates home loan, micro-finance and insurance broking subsidiaries, said net profit of the gold loan division increased 11 % YoY to Rs 994 crore ,and the share in the consolidated profit stands at 99%.

Consolidated loan assets under management of Muthoot increased 5% on a sequential basis to Rs 60,919 crore.

MD George Alexander Muthoot said, “The demand environment remains strong and as we enter the festive season we remain optimistic about growth momentum in gold loan over the second half of FY22. We are optimistic about growing our gold loan book further and maintain 15% growth guidance for FY22. We are witnessing improved collections across micro finance, vehicle finance and home loans. In the last quarter we had consciously decided to go slow on non-gold lending business, we continue to remain conscious and monitor the space for emerging opportunities. We will continue to follow the strategy of balanced growth while maintaining overall asset quality.”

Loan assets of the gold loan division for the quarter stands at Rs55102 crore compared to Rs 5,2394 crore in the comparable quarter of the previous year, which is 5% y-o-y growth.

Average gold loan per branch has increased by 18% YoY to Rs 11.84 crore. Total weight of gold pledged with the company stands at 178 tonne at the end of the second quarter as against 163 tonne in the corresponding period of last fiscal year. Average loan ticket size has increased by 2 % YoY to touch Rs 62,054 as against Rs 60,642 in the year-ago period. Number of loan accounts of the NBFC has also increased 88 lakh, an increase of 16 % YoY.

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Dhanlaxmi Bank Q2 net plunges 74% as bad assets rise

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In value terms, gross NPAs increased to Rs 604.15 crore from Rs 448.72 crore in the year-ago period.

Dhanlaxmi Bank on Friday reported a 74% year-on-year (Y-o-Y) decline in its net profit to Rs 3.66 crore for the quarter ended in September 2021 as provisions rose due to a spike in bad loans. The Thrissur-based lender had reported a net profit of Rs 14.01 crore in Q2 of FY21 and Rs 6.79 crore in the preceding quarter.

Provisions and contingencies have increased by 422% to Rs 22.40 crore, as against Rs 4.29 crore in the year-ago period.

The asset quality has worsened with gross NPA as a percentage of gross advances rising to 8.67% for the quarter under review, against 6.36% in the second quarter of last fiscal and 9.27% in Q1 of FY22.

The net NPA ratio was reported at 4.92%, compared to 1.66% reported in the year-ago period and 4.58% in the first quarter of the current fiscal.

In value terms, gross NPAs increased to Rs 604.15 crore from Rs 448.72 crore in the year-ago period.

The total income for Q2 of FY22 was higher by 6.7% YoY to Rs 266.59 crore, while the bank’s interest income falling to Rs 229.01 and other income increasing to Rs 37.58 crore from Rs 5.69 crore in the comparable period of last fiscal.

The provision coverage ratio (including technical write-off) as of September 30, 2021, was 74.18% and the capital adequacy ratio stood at 13.64%.

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Banks make higher-than-required provisions for Srei Group exposure

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Large public sector banks (PSBs) have proactively made substantially higher provisions, ranging from 40-100 per cent, towards their exposure to the Kolkata-based Srei Group against the usual regulatory requirement of 15 per cent.

Forensic audit

This is due to the uncertainty over what a forensic audit of the account may reveal and the haircut lenders may have to take under the corporate insolvency resolution process (CIRP) initiated against the group.

The Reserve Bank of India’s norms require banks to make a general provision of 15 per cent on their total outstanding exposure to a substandard asset. Unsecured substandard assets attract an additional provision of 10 per cent.

Bankers say they don’t want any surprises on the provisioning front in the coming quarters vis-a-vis the Srei account, which comprises Srei Infrastructure Finance Ltd (SIFL) and its wholly owned subsidiary Srei Equipment Finance Ltd (SEFL).

Moreover, recovery from the resolution of DHFL and healthy profit in the second quarter have given them the elbow room to increase the provisions.

The banks that have made higher upfront provisions towards their exposure to the Srei Group include State Bank of India (SBI, 100 per cent), Union Bank of India (UBI, 65 per cent), Bank of India and Central Bank of India (BoI, CBoI 50 per cent each), and Punjab National Bank (PNB, 40 per cent). PNB has an exposure of ₹2,600 crore to the Srei group, UBI ₹2,558 crore, BoI ₹1,024 crore in direct exposure and ₹970 crore via pooled route, and CBoI ₹1,149 crore. SBI’s exposure is believed to be over ₹2,000 crore.

₹26,476-crore borrowings

As at March-end 2021, the consolidated borrowings of the Srei Group stood at ₹26,476 crore. This includes term loans, working capital facilities, collateral borrowings and unsecured loans. Liabilities in the form of debt securities and subordinated liabilities stood at ₹2,441 crore and ₹2,785 crore respectively.

Governance concerns

RBI had, on October 4, 2021, superseded the Board of Directors of SIFL and SEFL. The central bank, in a statement, said it took this action owing to governance concerns and defaults by these companies in meeting their various payment obligations.

It appointed Rajneesh Sharma, Ex- Chief General Manager, Bank of Baroda, as the Administrator of the aforesaid companies.

The central bank’s applications for initiation of CIRP against SIFL and SEFL under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC), 2016, read with Financial Service Providers Insolvency Rules were admitted by the Kolkata Bench of the National Company Law Tribunal on October 8.

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Reserve Bank of India – Press Releases

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1. Reserve Bank of India – Liabilities and Assets*
(₹ Crore)
Item 2020 2021 Variation
Oct. 30 Oct. 22 Oct. 29 Week Year
1 2 3 4 5
4 Loans and Advances          
4.1 Central Government 0 0 0 0 0
4.2 State Governments 4191 4802 1966 -2836 -2225
* Data are provisional.

2. Foreign Exchange Reserves
Item As on October 29, 2021 Variation over
Week End-March 2021 Year
₹ Cr. US$ Mn. ₹ Cr. US$ Mn. ₹ Cr. US$ Mn. ₹ Cr. US$ Mn.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
1 Total Reserves 4807657 642019 14491 1919 588705 65035 652477 81304
1.1 Foreign Currency Assets 4331763 578462 10320 1363 407595 41768 490554 60122
1.2 Gold 292141 39012 4287 572 44418 5132 23440 2753
1.3 SDRs 144553 19304 -127 -17 133690 17818 133573 17822
1.4 Reserve Position in the IMF 39201 5242 11 1 3003 317 4909 606
*Difference, if any, is due to rounding off

4. Scheduled Commercial Banks – Business in India
(₹ Crore)
Item Outstanding as on Oct. 22, 2021 Variation over
Fortnight Financial year so far Year-on-year
2020-21 2021-22 2020 2021
1 2 3 4 5 6
2 Liabilities to Others            
2.1 Aggregate Deposits 15712486 -43380 724020 598974 1313428 1420974
2.1a Growth (Per cent)   –0.3 5.3 4.0 10.1 9.9
2.1.1 Demand 1826768 42083 -111749 -34424 143961 321514
2.1.2 Time 13885718 -85463 835769 633398 1169467 1099460
2.2 Borrowings 256984 3583 -54100 12959 -80738 1644
2.3 Other Demand and Time Liabilities 570767 -5011 -39775 -85841 52849 6865
7 Bank Credit 11046293 31327 -31993 96784 498306 707426
7.1a Growth (Per cent)   0.3 –0.3 0.9 5.1 6.8
7a.1 Food Credit 63697 1289 14895 2443 -3120 -2962
7a.2 Non-food credit 10982596 30037 -46888 94341 501425 710388

6. Money Stock: Components and Sources
(₹ Crore)
Item Outstanding as on Variation over
2021 Fortnight Financial Year so far Year-on-Year
2020-21 2021-22 2020 2021
Mar. 31 Oct. 22 Amount % Amount % Amount % Amount % Amount %
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
M3 18844578 19522794 -45282 -0.2 1003776 6.0 678216 3.6 1848377 11.6 1719055 9.7
1 Components (1.1.+1.2+1.3+1.4)                        
1.1 Currency with the Public 2751828 2825645 -4899 -0.2 269830 11.5 73817 2.7 457697 21.2 206067 7.9
1.2 Demand Deposits with Banks 1995120 1962004 42844 2.2 -112006 -6.4 -33116 –1.7 148181 10.0 336318 20.7
1.3 Time Deposits with Banks 14050278 14687980 -82655 -0.6 843743 6.7 637701 4.5 1232994 10.0 1170221 8.7
1.4 ‘Other’ Deposits with Reserve Bank 47351 47165 -572 -1.2 2209 5.7 -186 –0.4 9505 30.5 6449 15.8
2 Sources (2.1+2.2+2.3+2.4-2.5)                        
2.1 Net Bank Credit to Government 5850374 5977572 -149963 -2.4 626856 12.6 127198 2.2 735061 15.1 390354 7.0
2.1.1 Reserve Bank 1099686 1043103 -95531   -86738   -56582   -61505   137649  
2.1.2 Other Banks 4750689 4934469 -54432 -1.1 713594 18.0 183780 3.9 796566 20.5 252704 5.4
2.2 Bank Credit to Commercial Sector 11668466 11751200 29148 0.2 -39025 -0.4 82734 0.7 542424 5.2 751581 6.8
2.2.1 Reserve Bank 8709 1980 -2454   1626   -6729   7112   -12812  
2.2.2 Other Banks 11659757 11749221 31602 0.3 -40651 -0.4 89463 0.8 535312 5.1 764393 7.0

8. Liquidity Operations by RBI
(₹ Crore)
Date Liquidity Adjustment Facility MSF* Standing Liquidity Facilities Market Stabi lisation Scheme OMO (Outright) Long Term Repo Operations& Targeted Long Term Repo Operations# Special Long- Term Repo Operations for Small Finance Banks Special Reverse Repo£ Net Injection (+)/ Absorption (-) (1+3+5+ 6+9+10+ 11+12-2- 4-7-8-13)
Repo Reverse Repo* Variable Rate Repo Variable Rate Reverse Repo Sale Purchase
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
Oct. 25, 2021 139644 400 2500 -136744
Oct. 26, 2021 174518 200019 250 –2500 -376787
Oct. 27, 2021 179641 324 -179317
Oct. 28, 2021 202492 230 2500 -199762
Oct. 29, 2021 184740 455 –2500 -186785
Oct. 30, 2021 61323 0 -61323
Oct. 31, 2021 8289 14 -8275
* Includes additional Reverse Repo and additional MSF operations (for the period December 16, 2019 to February 13, 2020).
# Includes Targeted Long Term Repo Operations (TLTRO) and Targeted Long Term Repo Operations 2.0 (TLTRO 2.0) and On Tap Targeted Long Term Repo Operations. Negative (-) sign indicates repayments done by Banks.
& Negative (-) sign indicates repayments done by Banks.
£ As per Press Release No. 2021-2022/177 dated May 07, 2021. From June 18, 2021, the data also includes the amount absorbed as per the Press Release No. 2021-2022/323 dated June 04, 2021.

The above information can be accessed on Internet at https://wss.rbi.org.in/

The concepts and methodologies for WSS are available in Handbook on WSS (https://rbi.org.in/scripts/PublicationsView.aspx?id=15762).

Time series data are available at https://dbie.rbi.org.in

Ajit Prasad
Director   

Press Release: 2021-2022/1150

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Muthoot Finance sees net profit grow 11% to ₹994 crore in Q2

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Gold loan lender Muthoot Finance has posted 11 per cent growth in its net profit to ₹994 crore in Q2FY22 against ₹894 crore in Q2FY21.

Consolidated profit was ₹1,002 crore compared to ₹979 crore in the corresponding period of the previous fiscal. Loan assets stood at ₹55,147 crore compared to ₹47,016 crore last year, a growth of 17 per cent. Over the quarter, gold loan assets increased by ₹2,613 crore, a rise of 5 per cent.

Also see: Muthoot Fincorp organises Small Shop Days in Kochi

George Jacob Muthoot, Chair, Muthoot Finance, said, “As the second wave of the pandemic ebbs and the economy further unlocks, corporate India has emerged stronger and better. We were able to maintain growth momentum during the quarter with all of our branches now open for business. Our consolidated AUM stood at ₹60,919 crore as of end September 2021, clocking a growth of five per cent QoQ and a growth of 17 per cent YoY despite a challenging business environment. The contribution of our subsidiaries to the overall consolidated AUM stands steady at 10 per cent.”

Growth in gold loans

George Alexander Muthoot, Managing Director, Muthoot Finance, said, “The demand environment remains strong and as we enter the festive season, we remain optimistic about growth momentum in gold loan over the second half of FY22. We are optimistic about growing our gold loan book further and maintain 15 per cent growth guidance for FY22.

Also see: Why gold loans continue to glitter in these trying times

“We are witnessing improved collections across microfinance, vehicle finance and home loans. In the last quarter, we had consciously decided to go slow on non-gold lending business. We continue to remain conscious and monitor the space for emerging opportunities. We will continue to follow the strategy of balanced growth while maintaining overall asset quality,” he added.

Subsidiary contributions

Muthoot Homefin (India) has posted a PAT of ₹0.23 crore in Q2 and total revenue of ₹46 crore. Belstar Microfinance achieved a PAT of ₹2 crore and total revenue for Q2 stood at ₹150 crore. Muthoot Insurance Brokers achieved a PAT of ₹5 crore. Asia Asset Finance achieved a PAT of LKR 2 crore (around ₹0.73 crore). Muthoot Money achieved a PAT of ₹0.92 crore.

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Bandhan Bank eyes reduction in group microfinance loans

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Bandhan Bank is looking to bring down the share of group microfinance loans to around 50 per cent by March 2022 and to 30 per cent of its total loan book in the next four to five years.

Diversify asset mix

The share of group loan to the total loan book of the bank, which was around ₹81,660 crore, currently stands at close to 57 per cent.

The bank plans to grow the share of individual loans which are typically not restrained by ticket size (as in the case of group loans) to around 20–30 per cent (of its total loan book) from the current 10 per cent as a part of its strategy to diversify its asset mix.

Group to individual loans

According to Chandra Shekhar Ghosh, MD & CEO, Bandhan Bank, the bank is in the process of upgrading some of their group loan borrowers into individual loanees. The bank chooses some of its existing borrowers under group loan model who have been doing well and generating “good income”. It also checks for the credit quality using data from credit bureaus before upgrading the customer into an individual borrower.

Also see: Bandhan Bank posts ₹3,009-cr net loss in Sept quarter on high provision

“We developed this product (group loan to individual loan) about two years back and we have tested the system and processes. It has witnessed a very good growth of around 155 per cent on a y-o-y basis. Individual loans account for around 14 per cent of our total microcredit book and in the future we are looking to diversify group loan to individual loan,” Ghosh told BusinessLine.

Save on time

While there may not be much of a difference in terms of interest paid by both set of borrowers, individual loanees are usually not required to attend group meetings which are organised on a weekly or fortnightly basis, thereby saving time. Staff can utilise the time to grow other businesses.

Besides, unlike in group loans where there is a cap on the amount that can be disbursed to a particular group (by a set of lenders), in individual loans that is not the case and the bank can extend a loan based on the viability of the business model, Ghosh said. Moreover, the bank would also be free to cross-sell other products including housing loan, consumer loan etc to these customers, thereby bringing in more business in the future.

Vision 2025

The bank, which had unveiled its Vision 2025 last year and laid out a roadmap for diversification, expects the plan to get pushed back by a few months due to Covid induced slowdown and its impact on businesses.

As on September 30, 2021, its total advances stood at ₹81,660 crore. Of this, group microcredit (EEB Group) accounted for around 57 per cent, individual loans (EEB Individual) around 10 per cent, commercial 8 per cent, housing 24 per cent, and retail one per cent.

Also see: RBI approves Bandhan Bank as ‘agency bank’ to conduct govt biz

Under Vision 2025, the share of group loans should come down to 30 per cent; individual and commercial loan together should account for around 30 per cent; housing would be another 30 per cent and the share of retail is expected to increase to 10 per cent.

“Our Vision 2025 plans may get delayed by one year because of this Covid…. we should get a clearer picture next year and we would be able to revise our plan accordingly,” Ghosh said.

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Crypto exchanges launch crypto gift cards

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Amidst rising investor interest, cryptocurrency exchanges have launched crypto gift cards as an alternative to traditional gifts like sweets given on Diwali and other festive occassions.

Bitbns has launched exclusive crypto gift cards.

“These gift cards will be available in multiple cryptocurrency options like Bitcoin, Ethereum and many more,” it said in a statement.

Starting on November 4, anyone can avail of the benefits of the crypto gift cards irrespective of whether they invest or trade in cryptocurrency, it said.

CrossTower

Similarly, CrossTower has also introduced an e-gift card feature that allows its users to gift cryptocurrencies of their choice to friends and families.

“Indian users can create a personalised gift card by adding their preferred cryptocurrency from CrossTower wallet, to generate a unique card ready for sharing,” it said.

Users receiving the e-gift card can redeem it at the CrossTower India App (Application) by sharing the voucher link in the ‘Redeem’ section, after registering with the platform. The cryptocurrency will be automatically updated in their CrossTower wallet.

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Dollar in driver’s seat as payrolls loom; sterling staggers

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The dollar was on course for a second straight week of gains against major peers on Friday, ahead of a key US jobs report that could sway the timing of Federal Reserve interest rate increases.

Sterling headed for its worst week in 11 after the Bank of England caught the market off-guard by keeping rates steady on Thursday.

The dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of six rivals, was steady at 94.327 after rallying 0.51 per cent overnight. That lifted it into the positive for the week, adding 0.20 per cent.

The British pound was little changed on Friday following a 1.36 per cent tumble in the previous session that set it upfor a 1.39 per cent slump for the week.

Investors have been forced to reset monetary policy expectations this week, after some of the biggest global central banks knocked back bets for early rate hikes.

European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde pushed back on Wednesday against market bets for a rate hike as soon as next October and said it was very unlikely such a move would occur in 2022.

Also on Wednesday, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said he was in no rush to hike borrowing costs, even as the Federal Open Market Committee announced a $15 billion monthly tapering of its $120 billion in monthly asset purchases.

The Fed has set a labour market recovery as a condition for rates lift-off. US non-farm payrolls due later on Friday are forecast by economists to show a 450,000 surge in jobs in October, following a 194,000 rise in the prior month.

“The FOMC delivered a ‘dovish taper,’ but the USD is still better positioned than most,” Westpac strategists wrote in a client note.

“Payrolls this week should be at least as strong as consensus given signs that recovery momentum is accelerating again,” making dips into the mid-93s a buying opportunity for the dollar index, they said.

Euro trades flat

The euro was little changed at $1.1556 after dropping 0.49 per cent overnight, putting it on course for a 0.16 per cent decline this week.

“If the markets are indeed dominated by the ‘taking away the punch bowl’ theme, then this force will prove consistently corrosive against the EUR,” Deutsche Bank macro strategist Alan Ruskin wrote in a research note.

“It may need more than payrolls to break 1.15, but payrolls will not stand in the way of the USD chipping away at EUR/USD’s major downside support.”

The dollar was about flat at 113.67 yen, down 0.29 per cent since last Friday. While the Bank of Japan is set to be slowest among developed-market central banks to normalize policy, the Japanese currency benefited as those expectations remained constant while investors cut bets elsewhere.

The Reserve Bank of Australia set the tone for the week on Tuesday, when policy makers stuck to their dovish stance in the face of increasingly sticky inflation pressures.

On Friday, the RBA said in its statement on monetary policy that “an increase in the cash rate in 2023 could be warranted. However, in the Board’s view, the latest data and forecasts do not warrant an increase in the cash rate in 2022,” as markets are pricing.

The Aussie dollar was slightly lower on the day at $0.7394, adding to the previous session’s 0.67 per cent decline and putting it on course for a 1.67 per cent drop this week.

New Zealand’s kiwi dollar slipped 0.09 per cent to $0.70915 after a 0.81 per cent slide on Thursday, setting up a 1.07 per cent weekly loss.

Among cryptocurrencies, bitcoin was around $62,100, having largely traded sideways since it hit its all-time high above $67,000 last month.

Ether, the second-biggest cryptocurrency, traded around $4,500 after hitting a record high of $4,670.81 on Wednesday.

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