The data helped underscore expectations that the Fed would raise interest rates at a faster pace next year, a view that gained traction after the Fed on December 14 projected three rate hikes next year, up from the two foreseen in September. The data also sent US Treasury yields higher.
Trading was thin as markets in Britain, Australia, New Zealand, Canada and Hong Kong were closed for holidays. "The prospect of Fed tightening next year is keeping bonds under pressure, yields up and the dollar bid, and obviously the Case-Shiller data is helping that," said Kathy Lien, managing director at BK Asset Management in New York. The dollar extended its gains to a fresh session high against the yen of 117.60 yen, putting it up about 0.4 percent against the Japanese currency on the day, in the wake of data showing US consumer confidence hit its highest in more than 15 years in December.
The dollar remained below a 10-month high of 118.66 yen touched December 15 and a 14-year high against a basket of major currencies touched December 20. The dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of six major rivals, was last up just 0.06 percent at 103.070, below the 14-year peak of 103.650. Analysts said the dollar's uptrend looked intact, even as 120 yen and parity with the euro remained out of reach for the greenback on Tuesday. Sterling was last down 0.34 percent against the dollar at $1.2255, with analysts attributing the drop to concerns over next year's Brexit negotiations. The euro was last mostly flat against the greenback at $1.0457.