The euro moved further above a one-month low reached last week as investors squared positions before a European Central Bank meeting this week.

Sterling rebounded from a one-week low versus the dollar. Investors were watching whether British Prime Minister Theresa May could convince the European Union to again postpone her country's exit from the bloc.

"It's that expectations for global growth have bottomed. It's more than greenshoots have emerged," said Paresh Upadhyaya, director of currency strategy at Amundi Pioneer Investment Management in Boston.

Encouraging economic data last week from China and the United States boosted market sentiment, lifting growth-oriented currencies like the Austrialian and New Zealand dollars, Upadhyaya said.

At 10:31 a.m. (1431 GMT), an index that tracks the dollar versus the euro, yen, sterling and three other currencies was down 0.4% at 97.010.

The euro was up 0.47% at $1.12700 after hitting $1.11830 last Tuesday, which was the lowest since March 8. The single currency rose to a two-week high at 125.545 yen.

Traders cut long euro positions last week by the most in nine months, data showed, as core European bond yields entered negative territory and PMI data indicated the euro zone economy was struggling.

"We are seeing more euro scepticism in the market as expectations of an ECB rate hike has changed from the foreseeable future, with no firm timeline in sight," said Ulrich Leuchtmann, a currency strategist at Commerzbank in London.

No policy changes are expected at this week's ECB meeting, but the press conference afterward will be in focus amid talk of tiered rates, global recession fears and a sense of alarm that pushed 10-year German bond yields below zero percent for the first time since 2016.

The Australian dollar was up 0.3% at $0.71275 in the wake of declining prices of commodities such as copper.

The pound rose further from a one-week low. May is seeking a compromise with Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn to attain parliamentary approval for a Brexit deal and to support an agreement to delay Britain's departure until the end of June. Sterling was up 0.13% at $1.3052.

(Additional reporting by Saikat Chatterjee in LONDON; Editing by Hugh Lawson and David Gregorio)

By Richard Leong