Elsewhere, the greenback broadly advanced on the back of its Atlantic counterparts’ decline, reversing its losses earlier in the week.
The pound slid 0.15% to a more than two-week low of $1.2206 in early Asia trade, after falling 1.2% in the previous session, its largest daily decline in a month.
The euro was last 0.16% lower at $1.0893, after tumbling 0.7% on Thursday to move further away from its 10-month peak of $1.1034.
On Thursday, the ECB and BoE each raised interest rates by 50 basis points as expected, with the latter signalling the tide was turning in its battle against high inflation.
While the ECB explicitly alluded to at least one more hike of the same magnitude next month and reaffirmed its commitment in battling high inflation, President Christine Lagarde acknowledged the euro zone outlook had become less worrisome for growth and inflation.
“The ECB was a little bit more dovish than markets had previously expected … (while) the Bank of England has given a small hint that they might be close to finishing their tightening cycle,” said Carol Kong, a currency strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA). Remarks from the ECB and the BoE came a day after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell similarly said in a news conference following the Fed‘s 25bp rate hike that the “disinflationary” process in the United States appeared to be underway.
The dollar on Friday recovered from a heavy selloff in the aftermath of Powell’s speech, and against a basket of currencies, the U.S. dollar index rose 0.03% to 101.82, away from Wednesday’s nine-month low of 100.80.
Friday’s nonfarm payrolls report will be the next major test of the Fed’s fight against inflation. Signs are still pointing to a tight labour market, with the number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment benefits dropping to a nine-month low last week.
In other currencies, the Aussie fell 0.11% to $0.7068, having lost 0.86% on Thursday, while the kiwi was little changed at $0.6475.
The comments from policymakers following a slew of central bank meetings this week have markets seizing on signs that interest rates could be close to peaking in most major economies.
“We’re starting to see central banks converging to a pattern now … the major central banks are definitely approaching the end of their tightening cycles,” said CBA’s Kong.
An imminent peak in U.S. rates has provided some relief for the Japanese yen, which last year crumbled under pressure from rising interest rate differentials against Japan’s low interest rate environment.
The yen was last marginally higher at 128.66 per dollar and was headed for a weekly gain of nearly 1%, reversing two straight weeks of decline.