The dollar came under pressure on two fronts this week - Donald Trump's impeachment risk and the president's disparaging remarks about the Federal Reserve for raising US interest rates. But it is the Fed's own views, with a tilt to the dovish side, that should see the dollar lose the momentum of recent months, Société Générale's Alvin Tan tells Roger Blitz. That should mean renewed strength for the euro and yen, but not necessarily for emerging market currencies.
Death of the dollar bears
Markets on horns of euro-dollar dilemma
Brexit, trade tensions, and why investors don't look too fussed
Wages growth pays dividend for euro and sterling
EM can't catch a break
Pushed around by politics
Turkish turmoil raises markets' temperature
Dollar to drive on, pound to stay pat
Pound takes a pass on Boris blow-out
China plays its currency card
Markets mindful of Merkel's migration problems
EM sell-off: now it's Asia's turn
Fed flies, ECB evolves
Euro-bulls should rein in their euphoria
Rome's home truths for markets
How to digest a roasted Turkey
Ripple effects of EM forex falls
EM investors' pain trade
Don’t dismiss dollar drive
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