Monday, April 30, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Dollar hits 2-mth low as U.S. economic momentum slows

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Dollar hits 2-mth low as U.S. economic momentum slows
Apr 30th 2012, 08:22

Mon Apr 30, 2012 4:22am EDT

  * Disappointing U.S. growth keeps dollar under pressure      * Dollar hits 2-mth low against currency basket      * Stuck near 2-mth low vs yen, euro supported          By Anirban Nag            LONDON, April 30 (Reuters) - The dollar fell to a two-month  low against a basket of currencies on Monday, weighed down after  modest first quarter growth in the U.S. economy kept alive  chances of further monetary easing by the Federal Reserve.            The dollar is likely to come under more pressure if data,  including U.S. jobs numbers, this week disappoints. U.S. growth  cooled in the first quarter partly due to businesses cutting  back on investments, reinforcing the central bank's contention  that interest rates should be kept near zero through 2014.            The slowdown fuelled speculation that the Fed may eventually  launch another bond buying programme, or a third round of  quantitative easing. That would likely have a negative effect on  the dollar while giving riskier assets like stocks, commodities  and higher-yielding currencies like the Australian dollar   a boost.             The greenback's woes even supported the euro despite  prospects of a prolonged slowdown in the euro zone as severe  austerity measures take a toll on economic activity across the  region.       Spain slipped back into recession as gross domestic product  shrank 0.3 percent in the January to March quarter, data showed  on Monday.            "The dollar is under pressure but the euro is by no means  out of the woods and the Spanish GDP data is a pointer," said  Peter Kinsella, currency strategist at Commerzbank, London.           "Besides, liquidity in the markets is a bit thin because of  holidays this week and this can make price movements a bit  exaggerated."         Markets in most of Europe will be shut on Tuesday for the  May Day holiday while Japan celebrates Golden Week holidays,  keeping trading on foreign exchange markets a bit subdued.            Against its basket of currencies, the dollar, fell to  78.638, its lowest level since March 1.       Against the yen, the dollar dropped to 80.08 at one point on  trading platform EBS, its lowest level since late February, and  last stood at 80.14 yen, down 0.2 percent from late U.S.  trade on Friday.              The euro was flat against the dollar at $1.3250, not far  from a near one-month high of $1.32706 struck on Friday with  traders citing buy stops above $1.3270, a break of which could  see it rise to $1.33. But any bounce to around those levels  could see more selling by bearish investors.          The common currency was down 0.3 percent against the yen  , dropping to 106.09 yen and hovering close to  two-week lows. Investors expect the yen to benefit from safe  haven  demand stemming from the euro zone's debt problems.            Business confidence in the region weakened sharply in April  and the ECB could scale back its economic outlook at its policy  meeting on Thursday. As such, the rising probability of further  easing by the European Central Bank in coming months could weigh  on the euro.                    EYES ON U.S. DATA         The dollar is likely to take cues later this week from a  batch of U.S. economic data, including the Institute for Supply  Management's (ISM) gauges of the manufacturing and services  sectors, as well as jobs numbers.             Both will be fresh pointers to U.S. economic momentum which  has shown signs of flagging, suggesting the Fed may consider  easing monetary policy further in June.       "Clearly if we do get a weak ISM and a 125,000 (increase in  payrolls), this dollar weakness is going to continue," said Rob  Ryan, Singapore-based FX strategist for BNP Paribas, whose  economists are predicting an additional 125,000 U.S. jobs in  April.        Average market expectations are for a rise of 170,000.                Market players said the dollar may fall further against the  yen in the near term given a drop in U.S. Treasury yields. The  dollar/yen exchange rate has a tight relationship with the  spreads between yields on U.S. Treasuries and Japanese  government bonds.             On Friday, the 10-year Treasury yield dipped to as low as  1.884 percent, its lowest level in nearly three  months.               Other factors that suggest the dollar may stay under  pressure against the yen include the existence of sizeable  bearish positions in the yen, a lack of interest in foreign bond  investment among Japanese investors, and the low probability of  yen-selling intervention, traders said.  
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