Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Asian shares up after Fed minutes, euro hits 7-week high

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Asian shares up after Fed minutes, euro hits 7-week high
Aug 23rd 2012, 00:43

Wed Aug 22, 2012 8:43pm EDT

  * MSCI Asia ex-Japan up 0.3 pct, Nikkei opens down 0.6 pct      * Euro hits fresh 7-week high vs dollar      * Fed minutes fuel expectations of US stimulus      * China HSBC PMI due at 0230 GMT        By Chikako Mogi      TOKYO, Aug 23 (Reuters) - Asian shares rose and the euro hit  a seven-week high on Thursday as the Federal Reserve's minutes  raised the prospect for more stimulus while uncertainty  continued over progress in Europe's debt crisis including the  European Central Bank's bold action.      Investors will be looking for clues on the outlook for the  world's second largest economy China in the second half of the  year, when China HSBC PMI figure, a measure for private-sector  manufacturing activity, is released around 0230 GMT.      Slowdown in China's growth and demand, stemming from the  slump in euro zone economy, has dragged exports from Japan,  South Korea and Taiwan, threatening to derail their recovery.      U.S. stocks erased most losses, Treasury bond prices rose  and the dollar fell after the minutes from the July 31-Aug. 1  Fed meeting showed it was likely to deliver another round of  monetary stimulus "fairly soon" unless incoming data point to  "substantial and sustainable" strengthening in the recovery.      MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan   inched up 0.3 percent while Japan's Nikkei stock  average opened down 0.6 percent, weighed by the yen's  strength.       The euro touched $1.2544 in early Asia, its highest  since July 4. The dollar traded at 78.55 yen, after  slipping to a low of 78.27 yen on Wednesday. The Australian and  New Zealand dollars rallied against the U.S. dollar on Thursday  on the minutes indicating the Fed's willingness to ease more.      But there were conflicting views on how much stimulus the  Fed may decide on.      "The data released since the August 1 conclusion does little  to sway the 'substantial and sustainable' requirement," said  Andrew Wilkinson, chief economic strategist at Miller Tabak &  Co. in a note.      "It seems that the stage is now set for (Fed Chairman Ben)  Bernanke to expand at his Jackson Hole meeting at the end of  this month upon the discussions that took place inside the Fed  at the start of August," he said, referring to the gathering of  central bankers and economists.                  The Fed's last policy meeting preceded a slew of positive  reports including retail sales, industrial output and nonfarm  payrolls, which boosted the dollar and lifted 10-year Treasury  yields to a three-month high above 1.85 percent last  week, up sharply from a record low 1.38 percent hit on July 25.      The positive economic reports have scaled back expectations  somewhat, but hopes remain for the Fed to take further stimulus  at its September meeting.      "Since the meeting of the minutes, the environment has  changed to make it doubtful if the Fed will take as aggressive  an action as markets appear to have taken from the minutes,"  said Yuji Saito, director of foreign exchange at Credit Agricole  in Tokyo, noting positive U.S. data, improving mood surrounding  Europe's woes and surging grains prices.      Deepening quantitative easing could fuel inflationary  pressures as money will likely flow into grains, further pushing  up prices of U.S. corn and soybean which hit record  highs this summer due to the country's worst drought in 56  years, Saito said.         "It may still take some stimulus but that has already been  anticipated, and the Fed has merely kept such expectations  intact. Players probably sold the dollar to adjust their  positions ahead of meetings surrounding Greece," said Saito.      Market sentiment has also been underpinned after the ECB  suggested it will come up with measures to contain surging  yields of indebted Spain and Italy.      Uncertainty lingered over the effectiveness of Greek Prime  Minister Antonis Samaras' attempts to convince other European  officials that his country should be given more time to meet  targets for deficit cuts.       Eurogroup chief Jean-Claude Juncker kept alive Greek hopes  of winning more time to push through austerity cuts but warned  the country was staring at its "last chance" to avoid  bankruptcy.  
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