Forex News
UOB’s Global Economics & Markets Research, led by Enrico Tanuwidjaja and Sathit Talaengsatya, argues that Thailand’s latest Consumer Price Index (CPI) data confirm a cost-push rather than demand-led inflation backdrop. They keep headline inflation forecasts at 1.4% for 2026 and 1.2% for 2027 and expect the BoT to maintain the 1-day repo rate at 1.00% through 2026 and 2027.
Cost-push inflation supports steady BOT stance
"That said, while noting the upside risks, we maintain our projection for headline inflation at 1.4% for 2026 and 1.2% for 2027, and our call for BoT to keep the policy rate at 1.00% through end-2026 and 2027."
"The authorities’ formal 2026 inflation forecast remains at 1.5%–2.5%, with a 2.0% midpoint, based on Dubai crude at USD75–85/bbl, USD/THB at 32.5–33.5, and GDP growth of 1.5%–2.5%; its latest end-May slide path put the 2026 average at 2.32%. BoT’s official view is more hawkish on the near-term headline path: it expects headline CPI at 2.9% in 2026, or 3.0% after incorporating government measures, before falling to 1.4% in 2027 as the energy shock and base effects fade."
"May CPI reinforces—not challenges—our view that Thailand is absorbing a negative terms-of-trade shock, rather than entering a domestic overheating cycle. We maintain our headline CPI forecasts at 1.4% in 2026 and 1.2% in 2027, while monitoring energy costs, 2H2026 fiscal stimulus against last year’s low base, wage-setting, services prices, and FX pass-through."
"That distinction matters for policy. It supports our call that the BoT keeps the policy rate at 1.00% through 2026–27: a rate hike would do little to lower oil, freight, or food-input costs, while another broad-based cut would be harder to justify when headline inflation is near the upper end of the target range. The BoT can credibly look through the shock only as long as medium-term inflation expectations remain anchored and second-round effects do not broaden into wages, services prices, and FX pass-through."
"The authorities’ formal 2026 inflation forecast remains at 1.5%–2.5%, with a 2.0% midpoint, based on Dubai crude at USD75–85/bbl, USD/THB at 32.5–33.5, and GDP growth of 1.5%–2.5%; its latest end-May slide path put the 2026 average at 2.32%."
(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)
- NZD/USD heads for a weekly loss of nearly 3% after upbeat US payrolls data.
- The US Dollar Index climbs to its highest level since April.
- China's CPI, PPI and Trade Balance data will be closely watched next week.
NZD/USD slips to its lowest level since April on Friday as the US Dollar (USD) receives fresh bids in the wake of solid US Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) data. At the time of writing, the pair trades around 0.5800 and is heading for a weekly loss of nearly 3%.
The US economy added 172K jobs in May, well above market expectations of 85K. April's payroll figures were revised higher to 179K from 115K, while the Unemployment Rate held steady at 4.3%.
Following the data, the US Dollar climbed to a two-month high as stronger-than-expected labor market data reinforced expectations that the Federal Reserve (Fed) can afford to keep interest rates unchanged amid heightened inflation risks stemming from higher Oil prices.
The US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the Greenback's value against a basket of six major currencies, trades around the 100.00 mark, up 0.64% on the day.
However, traders see a growing chance that the Fed could raise rates later this year. According to the CME FedWatch Tool, the probability of a 25-basis-point (bps) rate hike at the October meeting rose to 40% from 30% before the NFP report.
Looking ahead, New Zealand's economic calendar remains relatively empty next week, leaving traders focused on key US inflation data, including the Consumer Price Index (CPI) and Producer Price Index (PPI).
China's CPI, PPI and Trade Balance figures will also be closely watched, given New Zealand's strong trade ties with China and their potential impact on NZD/USD.
Technical Analysis:

In the daily chart, NZD/USD trades at 0.5800. The pair holds a bearish near-term bias, as spot now sits below the 50-, 100-, and 200-day Simple Moving Averages (SMAs), which all hover overhead and reinforce a heavy tone. Momentum indicators align with this stance, with the Relative Strength Index drifting near 41 and the Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) back in negative territory, hinting that downside pressure remains in play.
On the topside, initial resistance is seen at the 200-day SMA around 0.5838, with the 50-day SMA near 0.5867 and the 100-day SMA close to 0.5902 forming a broader resistance band that would need to be reclaimed to ease the current bearish pressure. With no clear technical support levels derived from moving averages or Fibonacci retracements just below the market in this dataset, any further losses would likely expose prior price lows as the next reference points for sellers.
(The technical analysis of this story was written with the help of an AI tool.)
Inflation FAQs
Inflation measures the rise in the price of a representative basket of goods and services. Headline inflation is usually expressed as a percentage change on a month-on-month (MoM) and year-on-year (YoY) basis. Core inflation excludes more volatile elements such as food and fuel which can fluctuate because of geopolitical and seasonal factors. Core inflation is the figure economists focus on and is the level targeted by central banks, which are mandated to keep inflation at a manageable level, usually around 2%.
The Consumer Price Index (CPI) measures the change in prices of a basket of goods and services over a period of time. It is usually expressed as a percentage change on a month-on-month (MoM) and year-on-year (YoY) basis. Core CPI is the figure targeted by central banks as it excludes volatile food and fuel inputs. When Core CPI rises above 2% it usually results in higher interest rates and vice versa when it falls below 2%. Since higher interest rates are positive for a currency, higher inflation usually results in a stronger currency. The opposite is true when inflation falls.
Although it may seem counter-intuitive, high inflation in a country pushes up the value of its currency and vice versa for lower inflation. This is because the central bank will normally raise interest rates to combat the higher inflation, which attract more global capital inflows from investors looking for a lucrative place to park their money.
Formerly, Gold was the asset investors turned to in times of high inflation because it preserved its value, and whilst investors will often still buy Gold for its safe-haven properties in times of extreme market turmoil, this is not the case most of the time. This is because when inflation is high, central banks will put up interest rates to combat it. Higher interest rates are negative for Gold because they increase the opportunity-cost of holding Gold vis-a-vis an interest-bearing asset or placing the money in a cash deposit account. On the flipside, lower inflation tends to be positive for Gold as it brings interest rates down, making the bright metal a more viable investment alternative.
- US 2-year yield jumps as traders price tighter Fed policy.
- Blowout NFP gives Fed hawks fresh ammunition to fight inflation.
- US Dollar Index breaks 100 as December hike odds climb sharply.
US Treasury yields skyrocket across the whole curve on Friday, with the 2-year Treasury note yield rising over 12 basis points, while the benchmark note, the 10-year, surges six basis points following an outstanding Nonfarm Payrolls report.
Treasury yields surge after payrolls crush forecasts, lifting Dollar
At the time of writing, the US 2-year Treasury note yields 4.162%, while the 10-year yield is at 4.538%. This signals that traders are expecting the Federal Reserve (Fed) to raise interest rates, spurred by high US inflation, with the latest Consumer Price Index (CPI) report showing prices rose 3.8% in April.
The stellar May’s Nonfarm Payrolls showed the strength of the labor market with the economy adding 172,000 workers, above estimates of 85,000. Also, the Unemployment Rate steadied at 4.3% for the third consecutive month, providing ammunition for Federal Reserve hawks to discuss whether to tighten monetary policy this year, after easing policy by 75 basis points in the second half of 2025.
The Cleveland Fed President Beth Hammack—the most hawkish member of the Fed and a voter in 2026—stated that it is “reasonable to keep rates steady for now, but if recent trades persist, it might soon be necessary to act against high inflation.”
Based on Prime Terminal data, there is a 67% chance the Federal Reserve will hike rates in December, but it has fully priced in a 25 bps increase for early 2027.
The US Dollar Index (DXY), which measures the buck's value against six currencies, jumps by 0.67% to 100.09 after bouncing from daily lows around 99.15.
In the meantime, the US financial markets' five-year inflation expectations are at 2.48%, down from 2.53% a day ago, according to the 5-year Breakeven Inflation Rate. For 10 years, the 10-year Breakeven rate fell from 2.38% to 2.36%, suggesting markets expect medium-term inflation to decline.
Upcoming US economic events for next week
The US docket will include inflation reports for both consumer and producer prices, along with jobless claims data. Worth noting that Federal Reserve officials will be in blackout period ahead of the June 16-17 meeting, the first led by the new Fed Chair, Kevin Warsh.
US 10-year Treasury note yield

Interest rates FAQs
Interest rates are charged by financial institutions on loans to borrowers and are paid as interest to savers and depositors. They are influenced by base lending rates, which are set by central banks in response to changes in the economy. Central banks normally have a mandate to ensure price stability, which in most cases means targeting a core inflation rate of around 2%. If inflation falls below target the central bank may cut base lending rates, with a view to stimulating lending and boosting the economy. If inflation rises substantially above 2% it normally results in the central bank raising base lending rates in an attempt to lower inflation.
Higher interest rates generally help strengthen a country’s currency as they make it a more attractive place for global investors to park their money.
Higher interest rates overall weigh on the price of Gold because they increase the opportunity cost of holding Gold instead of investing in an interest-bearing asset or placing cash in the bank. If interest rates are high that usually pushes up the price of the US Dollar (USD), and since Gold is priced in Dollars, this has the effect of lowering the price of Gold.
The Fed funds rate is the overnight rate at which US banks lend to each other. It is the oft-quoted headline rate set by the Federal Reserve at its FOMC meetings. It is set as a range, for example 4.75%-5.00%, though the upper limit (in that case 5.00%) is the quoted figure. Market expectations for future Fed funds rate are tracked by the CME FedWatch tool, which shapes how many financial markets behave in anticipation of future Federal Reserve monetary policy decisions.
OCBC’s FX Strategist Sim Moh Siong expects the Singapore Dollar (SGD) Nominal Effective Exchange Rate (NEER) to trade 1.5–2% above midpoint, supported by de-dollarisation and safe-haven flows, even as reduced carry tempers its appeal. With Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) having tightened in April and further tightening possible later in 2026, Siong projects USD/SGD to drift moderately lower toward 1.26 by year-end while the pair largely tracks overall USD direction.
Policy support underpins Singapore Dollar
"We expect the SGD NEER to hold firm within the policy band, trading about 1.5 to 2 percent above the midpoint. Support from de-dollarisation and safe-haven flows should persist, though reduced carry limits the SGD’s appeal."
"With further SGD gains capped by the band, USD/SGD will largely track USD direction. We are neutral on the USD near term and expect it to stay firm but rangebound."
"MAS tightened policy slightly in April. Elevated oil prices keep inflation risks alive and support expectations for further tightening. However, a back-to-back slope increase in July looks less urgent after the April core CPI undershoot."
"Growth signals are mixed. 1Q26 GDP surprised on the upside, but MTI highlighted significantly higher downside risks from the Iran conflict. The outlook is therefore less certain despite strong recent data. "
"We see scope for USD/SGD to moderately drift lower toward 1.26 by year-end, especially if MAS delivers additional tightening later this year."
(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)
Nordea’s Kristian Nummelin highlights that the Chinese yuan has been the best-performing Asian currency this year, appreciating against both the Dollar and the Euro despite widening US–China yield spreads. The People’s Bank of China appears comfortable with a stronger yuan, and Nordea expects gradual appreciation versus the Dollar to continue, supported by a large current account surplus and potential policy tolerance.
Policy tolerance for stronger yuan
"The Chinese yuan has performed well this year, both against the US dollar and the euro."
"The US-China rate differential is an important driver of USD/CNY."
"Since the Iran conflict began, US yields have moved higher, widening the yield spread versus China."
"Yet, USD/CNY has continued to trend lower, indicating that appreciation pressure appears persistent."
"The People’s Bank of China is not pushing back against the strengthening pressure, and the daily fixings suggest that further appreciation is tolerable for policymakers."
(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)
- XAU/USD tumbles as stellar payrolls report pushes Gold below the 200-day SMA.
- US payrolls smash forecasts, reinforcing Fed’s inflation-fighting stance.
- Treasury yields jump, dragging non-yielding Gold sharply lower.
- Hezbollah's rejection complicates US-Iran talks and ceasefire prospects.
Gold (XAU/USD) price collapses during the North American session on Friday as the latest Nonfarm Payrolls report in the US smashed forecasts, with figures for the last three months upwardly revised, increasing the chance of a Federal Reserve (Fed) rate hike. The XAU/USD pair trades at $4,336, down more than 3%.
XAU sinks as NFP shock sends US Dollar soaring
Nonfarm Payrolls in May significantly exceeded expectations, increasing by 172K—more than double the forecasted 85K—highlighting the robustness of the labor market and supporting the view that the Federal Reserve should focus on fighting inflation. Additionally, the Unemployment Rate remained steady at 4.3%, providing strong grounds for Fed officials to consider raising interest rates.
The Greenback appreciated sharply as traders expected higher US interest rates. The US Dollar Index (DXY), which measures the American Dollar's performance against six currencies, has risen 0.59% to 100.01 after bouncing from daily lows around 99.16.
US yields skyrocket as traders eye a Fed rate hike by 2026
US Treasury yields are soaring, with the 10-year Treasury note, which moves inversely with Gold prices, up nearly six basis points to 4.53%, a headwind for the yellow metal.
Beth Hammack from the Cleveland Fed was very hawkish, stating that it is “reasonable to keep rates steady for now, but if recent trades persist, it might soon be necessary to act against high inflation.”
According to Prime Terminal data, money markets assigne a 67% probability to a Federal Reserve rate increase at the December meeting. Meanwhile, traders anticipate the US central bank will hold rates steady in June.
US-Iran talks in trouble as Hezbollah rejects deal
In the Middle East, the narrative hasn’t changed, with an update that Iran is backing Lebanese allied Hezbollah in rejecting the ceasefire proposed by the US, and troubling negotiations between Washington and Tehran. Iran stated that an end to hostilities in Lebanon is required before setting out for a peace agreement with the United States.
The US-Iran war “will end only when it ends in Lebanon as well,” said Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi. He added that the Lebanon conflict would end with the “withdrawal of Israeli forces from the territories they have occupied.”
Next week’s US economic schedule
The US docket will feature inflation data on the consumer and producer sides, as well as jobless claims.
Gold Technical Levels
Gold price cleared the 200-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) of $4,432, an indication that the yellow metal shifted bearish from a technical standpoint.
The Relative Strength Index (RSI) shows that momentum remains bearish, but the index is accelerating towards oversold territory, a signal that sellers are gaining traction. Hence, the path of least resistance is downwards.
If XAU/USD clears the $4,300 level, the next support would be the upslope trendline from the October 2025 lows, near the $4,200-$4,230 area. Once those levels are surpassed, the next target is the March 23 cycle low at $4,098.
For a bullish recovery, Gold buyers must reclaim the 200-day SMA and the $4,450 psychological figure. Still above this area, they will meet stiff resistance at $4,500, ahead of the 50-day SMA at $4,627.

Gold FAQs
Gold has played a key role in human’s history as it has been widely used as a store of value and medium of exchange. Currently, apart from its shine and usage for jewelry, the precious metal is widely seen as a safe-haven asset, meaning that it is considered a good investment during turbulent times. Gold is also widely seen as a hedge against inflation and against depreciating currencies as it doesn’t rely on any specific issuer or government.
Central banks are the biggest Gold holders. In their aim to support their currencies in turbulent times, central banks tend to diversify their reserves and buy Gold to improve the perceived strength of the economy and the currency. High Gold reserves can be a source of trust for a country’s solvency. Central banks added 1,136 tonnes of Gold worth around $70 billion to their reserves in 2022, according to data from the World Gold Council. This is the highest yearly purchase since records began. Central banks from emerging economies such as China, India and Turkey are quickly increasing their Gold reserves.
Gold has an inverse correlation with the US Dollar and US Treasuries, which are both major reserve and safe-haven assets. When the Dollar depreciates, Gold tends to rise, enabling investors and central banks to diversify their assets in turbulent times. Gold is also inversely correlated with risk assets. A rally in the stock market tends to weaken Gold price, while sell-offs in riskier markets tend to favor the precious metal.
The price can move due to a wide range of factors. Geopolitical instability or fears of a deep recession can quickly make Gold price escalate due to its safe-haven status. As a yield-less asset, Gold tends to rise with lower interest rates, while higher cost of money usually weighs down on the yellow metal. Still, most moves depend on how the US Dollar (USD) behaves as the asset is priced in dollars (XAU/USD). A strong Dollar tends to keep the price of Gold controlled, whereas a weaker Dollar is likely to push Gold prices up.
OCBC’s FX Strategist Sim Moh Siong says softer Oil prices offer only limited relief to Asia FX, with the Korean Won and Indonesian Rupiah still pressured by equity outflows and policy concerns. He argues KRW fundamentals remain strong but are overshadowed by technical equity flows, while Bank Indonesia (BI) has reportedly stepped up FX intervention to stabilise the IDR.
Technical flows overshadow strong KRW
"Oil-importing Asia saw some relief from softer oil prices overnight, but FX remained under pressure, led by KRW and IDR. KRW weakness prompted renewed verbal intervention, while Bank Indonesia (BI) reportedly stepped up FX intervention to support the IDR."
"Recent KRW underperformance reflects flows rather than fundamentals. Fundamentals are positive: Semiconductor exports are strong, the KOSPI is rallying, and the Bank of Korea is signalling further rate hikes. "
"However, the AI-driven equity surge is concentrated in a handful of names, triggering rebalancing and foreign outflows due to concentration limits. This technical drag may persist near term and delay KRW upside."
"In Indonesia, parliament passed a sweeping financial sector law expanding BI’s mandate and introducing parliamentary performance reviews of BI officials."
"The mandate now more explicitly includes growth and employment alongside price and FX stability. Finance Minister Purbaya Yudhi Sadewa downplayed concerns, noting many central banks already factor in growth and jobs."
(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)
- May Nonfarm Payrolls came in at more than double consensus, driving a sharp, broad Dollar rally.
- Hawkish Fed commentary and rate futures tilting toward hikes reinforced the bid.
- Cooling annual wage growth and a level that has rejected the Dollar repeatedly this year leave the breakout's durability in doubt.
The market walked into Friday's payrolls report braced for weakness, and the US Dollar Index (DXY) made it pay. Consensus looked for a soft 85K of new jobs in May, the kind of number that fits a cooling labor market and a Federal Reserve (Fed) edging toward cuts. Instead, the print landed at 172K, more than double the estimate, and the Dollar tore higher across the board, ripping from near 99.20 up through the 100.00 handle for the first time in eight weeks. One number flipped two months of bearish positioning.
The number that ran the bears over
The May Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) figure did not just beat; it embarrassed the low bar set for it. At 172K against an 85K consensus, with the prior month revised up to 179K, the report read as a labor market that refuses to roll over. The Unemployment Rate held at 4.3% and the broader U6 underemployment gauge ticked down to 8.1%, while annual average hourly earnings eased to 3.4% YoY from 3.6%. The composition was less heroic than the headline: gains clustered in leisure and hospitality, local government, and health care, while finance shed jobs. Against positioning set up for a miss, though, the size of the beat was all that mattered.
A Fed already leaning the Dollar's way
The payrolls shock landed on top of a Fed that has been talking tougher. Cleveland Fed President Hammack warned earlier in the week that rates may need to rise rather than fall if inflation refuses to cool, and her follow-up remarks at 14:20 GMT carried the same hawkish edge. That lines up with what rate markets are pricing. The Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) FedWatch tool shows the June 16-17 Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting as a near-certain hold, but further out the distribution drifts higher, with rising odds of hikes through late 2026 and into 2027 rather than the cuts traders spent much of the spring chasing. A jobs beat that keeps the labor side of the mandate firm only reinforces that lean, and the Dollar took the hint.
Why the 100 reclaim still deserves side-eye
Here is the catch. The 100.00 area has been a graveyard for Dollar rallies all year. The daily chart shows the index running to fresh highs above 100.50 in early April before getting sold hard, sliding back toward 96.00 by the middle of the month, then grinding sideways for weeks. Friday's surge reclaims the handle, but reclaiming it and holding it are different things. The wage data quietly cuts against the hawkish story too: annual earnings cooled, so the inflation worry behind the hike chatter leans more on energy prices and the Iran-driven Crude Oil rally than on an overheating labor market. A single hot payrolls print, off a low consensus, is a reason to respect the move, not to assume it sticks.
Levels and the tests ahead
For now the Dollar has momentum and a backdrop that favors it, but the breakout has to earn the benefit of the doubt.
Upside: a daily close that holds above 100.00 keeps the door open toward the early-April highs near 100.50. A failure to hold the handle would mark another false break.
Downside: the intraday breakout pivot near 99.50 is first support, then the pre-payrolls base around 99.20 and the session low close to 99.15. A slide back under 99.50 would put the rally's credibility back in question.
Bias: constructive while 100.00 holds as support, skeptical the moment it does not. The real verdict comes from the June Consumer Price Index (CPI) report and the FOMC on June 16-17, which decide whether this hawkish repricing has legs or fades like the last few runs at this zone.
US Dollar Index 5-minute chart

US Dollar FAQs
The US Dollar (USD) is the official currency of the United States of America, and the ‘de facto’ currency of a significant number of other countries where it is found in circulation alongside local notes. It is the most heavily traded currency in the world, accounting for over 88% of all global foreign exchange turnover, or an average of $6.6 trillion in transactions per day, according to data from 2022. Following the second world war, the USD took over from the British Pound as the world’s reserve currency. For most of its history, the US Dollar was backed by Gold, until the Bretton Woods Agreement in 1971 when the Gold Standard went away.
The most important single factor impacting on the value of the US Dollar is monetary policy, which is shaped by the Federal Reserve (Fed). The Fed has two mandates: to achieve price stability (control inflation) and foster full employment. Its primary tool to achieve these two goals is by adjusting interest rates. When prices are rising too quickly and inflation is above the Fed’s 2% target, the Fed will raise rates, which helps the USD value. When inflation falls below 2% or the Unemployment Rate is too high, the Fed may lower interest rates, which weighs on the Greenback.
In extreme situations, the Federal Reserve can also print more Dollars and enact quantitative easing (QE). QE is the process by which the Fed substantially increases the flow of credit in a stuck financial system. It is a non-standard policy measure used when credit has dried up because banks will not lend to each other (out of the fear of counterparty default). It is a last resort when simply lowering interest rates is unlikely to achieve the necessary result. It was the Fed’s weapon of choice to combat the credit crunch that occurred during the Great Financial Crisis in 2008. It involves the Fed printing more Dollars and using them to buy US government bonds predominantly from financial institutions. QE usually leads to a weaker US Dollar.
Quantitative tightening (QT) is the reverse process whereby the Federal Reserve stops buying bonds from financial institutions and does not reinvest the principal from the bonds it holds maturing in new purchases. It is usually positive for the US Dollar.
UOB economists say Thailand’s May Consumer Price Index (CPI) eased slightly but stayed near the top of the Bank of Thailand's (BoT) target, with core inflation still subdued. They stress that price gains are driven by fuel, transport and prepared food rather than broad demand. Second-round effects are seen as limited, supporting a view of contained inflation rather than a sustained reflation cycle.
Inflation shock seen as narrow and supply-driven
"Thailand’s May- CPI outturn confirmed that the inflation shock in Apr has not broadened into a clean demand-led reflation cycle. Headline CPI rose +2.79% y/y and +0.17% m/m, easing from +2.89% y/y and +2.75% m/m in Apr."
"For the component breakdown, May CPI still pointed to cost-push inflation rather than demand-led reflation. Pass-through remained concentrated in the largest household baskets: food and non-alcoholic beverages (39.3%), transport and communication (22.5%), and housing/furnishing (24.5%), making energy, food logistics, prepared meals, and utilities the main channels."
"Upstream data reinforces the cost-push interpretation, but not an accelerating inflation cycle. May PPI rose 8.5% y/y, easing from 9.1% in Apr, and fell 1.3% m/m, with pressure concentrated in mining, industrial products, crude petroleum and natural gas, refined petroleum, chemicals, rubber and plastics, and semi-finished goods."
"Importantly, BoT continues to assess second-round effects as limited, citing weak purchasing power, anchored medium-term expectations, a low share of salaried employment, limited bargaining power, no wage indexation, and elastic labor supply."
"This is consistent with the BoT’s assessment that price increases are not yet broad-based or persistent under weak demand conditions, and that Thailand’s labor-market structure limits wage-price spiral risks."
(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)
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