NEW YORK, Sept 7 — The dollar rose in volatile trading yesterday after data showed US employment grew less than expected in August, but indicated only a steady slowdown in the labour market, likely supporting gradual interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve.

Nonfarm payrolls increased by 142,000 jobs last month after a downwardly revised 89,000 rise in July, the Labour Department’s Bureau of Labour Statistics said yesterday. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast payrolls increasing by 160,000 jobs after a previously reported 114,000 gain in July.

The dollar, which initially fell against most major peers after the release of the jobs data, soon recovered ground to trade higher. The US currency, a traditional safe haven, also found support as stocks and other risky assets sold off yesterday.

The euro was 0.3 per cent lower against the dollar at US$1.108225, jumping as high as US$1.1155 right after the release of the payrolls report. The Dollar Index, which measures the US currency’s strength against six major peers, was up 0.2 per cent at 101.21.

“I think the market’s really struggling with this one because it’s really in the middle of what could be used as a justification for either a 25 or 50 basis point rate cut,” Gennadiy Goldberg, head of US rates strategy at TD Securities, said.

Traders now see a 31 per cent chance that the Fed will cut its policy rate, now in the 5.25 per cent to 5.50 per cent range, to a 4.75 per cent to 5 per cent range at its upcoming meeting on September 17-18, according to LSEG data. Before the report they had seen about a 43 per cent chance of that outcome, favoring instead a quarter-point reduction.

“The US economy looks more likely to gouge the runway in the months ahead, justifying an increasingly aggressive response from officials at the Federal Reserve,” said Karl Schamotta, chief market strategist at payments company Corpay in Toronto.

“A half-point rate cut at the central bank’s September meeting remains unlikely, but today’s release provided clear evidence of a sharp deterioration in labour market fundamentals, and will bolster bets on at least one jumbo-sized rate cut in the coming months,” he said.

Against the Japanese yen, the dollar fell 0.7 per cent to 142.42 yen, on pace for a fourth straight session of losses.

Safe haven demand and expectations for imminent rate hikes from the Bank of Japan have helped support the Japanese currency in recent sessions.

Traders have sold the dollar against other currencies fairly consistently over the last couple of months, as concern has risen that a slowing US economy will require chunky rate cuts.

Federal Reserve policymakers yesterday hinted they are ready to kick off a series of interest rate cuts at the US central bank’s meeting in two weeks, noting a cooling in the labour market that could accelerate into something more dire in the absence of a policy shift.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell signalled that the central bank’s focus was shifting from fighting inflation to preventing deterioration in the job market when he strongly endorsed an imminent start to the monetary easing cycle at the annual economic conference in Jackson Hole last month.

The pound was about 0.4 per cent lower at US$1.3131.

The Bank of England meets in two weeks to set monetary policy. Right now, the derivatives market shows traders see very little chance of a rate cut this month, but a quarter-point cut is fully priced in for November 0#BOEWATCH.

In cryptocurrencies, bitcoin fell about 4 per cent to a fresh 1-month low of US$53,600, as investors avoided riskier assets. — Reuters