The US dollar ended the week mixed, rising against such majors like the euro and the Japanese yen, but falling versus such currencies like the Great Britain pound and the Canadian dollar. While nonfarm payrolls was the main economic release during the past week, traders paid more attention to escalation of trade war rhetoric between the United States and China.
China and the USA were exchanging back and forth with more and more tariffs announced. That weighed on the greenback. Nonfarm payrolls were not helping either, with lackluster jobs growth and the unexpected increase of the unemployment rate.
The Canadian dollar faced its share of problems, including falling prices for crude oil and the drop on Friday despite positive employment data. Yet that did not prevent the loonie to end the week as the strongest currency due to optimism about the NAFTA negotiations.
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