US Dollar Slips Due to Fading Lockdown Risks

The US dollar weakened after the development of the latest Omicron infection was considered not to trigger a strict lockdown. Risk appetite rose thus pressing the dollar's safe haven.

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The US dollar turned down in the trading session on Thursday (30/December) early in the morning. In the midst of a drag in liquidity ahead of the New Year holiday, safe-haven currencies (including the US Dollar and Yen) were sold off due to the resurgence of risk appetite. The US Dollar Index slipped 0.26% to 95.90.

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The development of the infection of the Omicron variant was a major highlight for investors in a quiet market. Although cases of the Omicron variant of COVID-19 are reported to have surged in more countries, the market is relieved because there is no indication of a strict and wide-ranging lockdown as previously feared.

United States health authorities have even recommended reducing the duration of isolation. US citizens who are positive for COVID-19 without symptoms are now sufficient to isolate for 5 days, which is shorter than the mandatory 10-day isolation policy that was implemented previously.

"Omicron variants are still rampant, but fail to significantly influence the market. Even though global cases have crossed one million cases in two days," said analysis from the Saxo Bank team.

This condition is a breath of fresh air for high-risk assets. Commodity currencies such as the Australian Dollar, New Zealand Dollar and Canadian Dollar also outperformed the USD. AUD/USD advanced 0.27% to 0.7248, the highest since November 22; NZD/USD jumps 0.39% to 0.6826; USD/CAD fell 0.23% to 1.2790.


Market In Chopper Situation

In general, the forex market is currently in a choppy trading mode. Given the large number of traders taking time off from the market, analysts said it would be difficult to read price movements in the current form of fluctuation.

"In times like this, we are trading very technically. It's just that some short-term traders are still trying to find their luck at the end of the year," commented Brad Bechtel, Jefferies analyst quoted by Reuters.

Bechtel added, the current forex market flow is still low volume compared to the end of the usual month. However, compared to last week, the current is a bit busier.

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