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RPT-COLUMN-Dollar cresting as central banks ape Fed :Mike Dolan

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(Repeats COLUMN originally published earlier on July 22, no changes)

By Mike Dolan

LONDON, July 22 (Reuters) - Central banks around the world are starting to sing from the U.S. Federal Reserve's hymn sheet - and it could well be a coda to the dollar's startling appreciation of the past year.

The European Central Bank's surprisingly large half-point interest rate rise on Thursday was a milestone for many reasons - the first ECB rate rise in more than a decade and the end of an eight-year experiment with negative policy rates.

Even though shy of the Fed's last 75 basis point hike, the choreography in Frankfurt this week owed much to the June move in Washington - last minute anonymous briefings of more hawkish intent and signals on Thursday that all is up for grabs at coming meetings given so-called 'forward guidance' is near pointless in such uncertain times.

In tune with the choir, Bank of England chief Andrew Bailey said on Tuesday the BoE too was considering stepping up its rate rise campaign, with its first half-point hike since gaining independence 25 years ago "on the table" for next month's meeting.

Clearly they have all listened attentively to the advice of their industry association - the Bank for International Settlements - which last month urged all members to act "quickly and decisively" to nip inflation in the bud.

With central banks all admitting visibility is low, ECB chief Lagarde admitted on Thursday that this was a frontloading of rate hikes rather than elevating the entire horizon or so-called "terminal rates". With recession risks in the air and long-term market inflation expectations in the United States and euro zone already back close to central bank targets, this makes sense.

But heightened hawkishness over the coming months - likely as much a political signal to governments, business and wage bargainers as anything - was taken on board by investors nonetheless.

"The greater than expected hike could be the start of more aggressive policy as the ECB has ended forward guidance," said Franklin Templeton's European fixed income chief David Zahn.

Rabobank strategist Bas van Geffen thinks there will be two more 50bps hikes from the ECB in September and October "with upside risks of 75"

And so if signs of "catchup" from other major central banks erodes perceptions of Fed exceptionalism, it could well take the heat from this year's roaring dollar rally - even marking a top after this month's brief flirtation with euro parity and after a near 20% surge on its DXY index since the start of 2021.