Monday, September 3, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Euro steady but market wary of post-ECB backlash

Reuters: US Dollar Report
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
FOREX-Euro steady but market wary of post-ECB backlash
Sep 3rd 2012, 14:19

Mon Sep 3, 2012 10:19am EDT

  * Expectations of ECB action this week support euro      * China, euro zone manufacturing data lags forecasts      * Aussie drops to six-week low versus U.S. dollar        By Anirban Nag      LONDON, Sept 3 (Reuters) - The euro held steady on Monday,  supported by expectations the European Central Bank will detail  plans this week to stem the debt crisis, but vulnerable to the  risk of disappointment and flagging growth prospects.      The growth-linked Australian dollar fell to fresh six-week  lows against the dollar and the yen as investors sold up after  signs of economic weakness in China and weak Australian data.      The euro stood at $1.2569, flat from late U.S. trade  on Friday and off an eight-week peak of $1.2638 set that day  after a speech by Federal Reserve President Ben Bernanke fanned  expectations of further stimulus to revive growth.      Traders cited option barriers at $1.2650, with resistance at  the July 2 high of $1.2681. Trade was slow with U.S. markets  closed for a holiday.      The euro was underpinned by expectations the ECB will unveil  a bond buying programme, probably at its policy meeting on  Thursday, aimed at lowering borrowing costs for peripheral euro  zone countries such as Spain and Italy.      That is expected to lower the risk premia - the additional  cost over low-risk securities - of holding European assets as  well as the euro, although some strategists say it would not  tackle the euro zone's underlying problems.      "We are of the view there is scope for disappointment even  though the market may initially take it as a positive. Going  forward there are still umpteen problems that will require a  weaker euro," said Derek Halpenny, European Head of currency  research at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi.      The ECB is also likely to downgrade growth forecasts this  week, adding to pressure for a cut in interest rates in coming  months. Data on Monday showed German and French factory activity  contracted in August.        ECB President Mario Draghi skipped last week's Jackson Hole  symposium to try to smooth over a deep rift within the ECB over  the bond scheme that is increasingly being played out in public.      However, investors expect Draghi will prevail over  opposition to the programme, notably from Germany's Bundesbank.  Reflecting this, speculators have for several weeks cautiously  trimmed bets on the euro falling.      Data from the U.S. financial watchdog showed on Friday that  speculators have cut their bets against the euro to the smallest  since April.                  FED EASING PROSPECTS      The dollar was under pressure against the yen after  Bernanke's speech. It last stood at 78.31 yen, near the  three-week low of 78.187 hit on Friday. But there was strong  support for the dollar at 78 yen with Japanese importers looking  to buy the U.S. currency at lower levels, traders said.      Bernanke said high unemployment was a grave concern and that  the Fed would act as needed to strengthen the recovery, though  he did not explicitly signal an imminent move, providing  temporary relief to the U.S. dollar.       A below-forecast U.S. jobs report this Friday could bolster  expectations of looser monetary policy and weigh on the dollar  in the run-up to the Fed's Sept 12-13 policy meeting, traders  said.      "However, we see strong support for the dollar at 78 yen and  we think the Bank of Japan will try and counter any Fed action  with further easing of its own when it meets the following  week," said Ned Rumpeltin, G-10 currency strategist at Standard  Chartered Bank.      "The BOJ remains concerned about the yen's strength, and a  third round of QE from the Fed will probably push them into  renewed action."      Meanwhile, the Australian currency fell to a near six-week  low against the U.S. dollar, hit by a double whammy of weak  Chinese and poor domestic data. The Aussie slid to a low of  $1.0233, retreating from Friday's high of $1.0355.  
  • Link this
  • Share this
  • Digg this
  • Email
  • Reprints

You are receiving this email because you subscribed to this feed at blogtrottr.com.

If you no longer wish to receive these emails, you can unsubscribe from this feed, or manage all your subscriptions

0 comments:

Post a Comment

 
Great HTML Templates from easytemplates.com.