Treasuries rallied in reaction, with yields on
two-year notes US2YT=RR falling to three-week lows, as did bonds in
Europe and Asia.
The odd man out was Canada,
where yields hit their highest since late 2013 after the Bank of Canada
raised rates a quarter point saying the economy no longer needed as much
stimulus.
The Canadian dollar CAD=D4 notched its biggest percentage gain since March 2016 and was last trading near one-year peaks at C$1.2740.
The main loser was the U.S. dollar which slipped to 112.97 on the yen JPY=, while the euro edged up to $1.1437 EUR=. Against a basket of currencies, the dollar was pinned just above nine-month lows at 95.602 .DXY.
The
drop in U.S. yields benefited gold, which pays no interest, and nudged
the precious metal up 0.3 percent to $1,223.67 XAU= and away from its
recent trough of $1,204.45.
Oil prices
flatlined as producer club OPEC said it expected demand for its crude to
decline next year as rivals pump more, pointing to a market surplus in
2018 despite efforts to tighten supply.

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