Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Yen climbs after BOJ, Italy debt sale lift euro

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Yen climbs after BOJ, Italy debt sale lift euro
Oct 30th 2012, 13:46

Tue Oct 30, 2012 9:46am EDT

  * Yen hits one-week high vs dollar, two-week high vs euro      * BOJ eases policy, but some had expected more      * Euro up versus dollar as Spain Q3 GDP less bad than feared      * Italy debt auctions also help euro      * Volumes thin as giant storm closes U.S. market        NEW YORK, Oct 30 (Reuters) - The yen rose broadly on Tuesday  after monetary easing steps from the Bank of Japan disappointed  investors who had positioned for a more aggressive increase in  asset purchases.      The BOJ increased its monetary stimulus for a second month  running, this time by 11 trillion yen ($138.5  billion). The yen gained after this, with traders  saying there had been speculation of a bigger stimulus.      The euro also gained against the dollar after data showed  the Spanish economy contracted slightly less than expected in  the third quarter and Italy's borrowing costs at a sale of five-  and ten-year debt.      A report showing U.S. single-family home prices rose in  August, the latest sign that the housing market is on the mend,  also bolstered risk appetite and demand for the euro.  [ID:nN9E8KR00S}      But trading moves were exacerbated by lighter than usual  volume with U.S. markets closed as one of the biggest storms  ever to hit the United States battered the eastern  seaboard.       "Dollar/yen dove through the 79.50 level in the wake of BOJ  announcement on quantitative easing that disappointed the  markets," said Boris Schlossberg, managing director of FX  strategy at BK Asset Management in New York. "Many traders were   hoping that Japanese monetary officials would deliver a bigger  boost."      The dollar hit a one-week low of 79.25 yen, breaking  below important chart support at the 200-day moving average. It  was last down 0.4 percent on the day at 79.44 yen.      Friday's four-month peak of 80.36 was expected to act as  resistance for the dollar.      The euro also fell to a two-week low against the  yen before reversing course to trade 0.1 percent higher at  103.06 yen.            SPAIN, ITALY NEWS LIFT EURO      The euro was last up 0.5 percent at $1.2968, close to  the session peak of $1.2974.       The euro was already bid after data showed the Spanish  economy contracted for a fifth straight quarter in the three  months to September at a slightly slower rate than forecast.         It was also helped by improved demand at an Italian debt  auction.       "There's been a little bit of speculative buying of  euro/dollar because the Spanish GDP data was not so bad as  feared," said Paul Bednarczyk, head of research at 4CAST in  London.          In Madrid, Cortal Consors economist said any suggestion that  the GDP number marked an upturn for Spain was "a mirage".       Market players cited bids at $1.2850-80 which should help  limit any losses, and expected buying ahead of the 200-day  moving average.      "We are very much in a range trade at the moment of  $1.28-$1.32," Bednarczyk said.      Some US$2.97 billion in euros has changed hands so far on  the last Tuesday of October, compared with US$4.87 billion for  the entire session on the last Tuesday of September, according  to Reuters Dealing.      Gains for the euro looked likely to be capped by concerns  about whether Greece can agree to a deal on more austerity, and  uncertainty over when Spain might request financial aid.      Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said on Monday he would  seek a credit line from the euro zone's rescue fund "when I  think it is in the interests of Spain".       Still, expectations the European Central Bank will start a  bond buying programme after Madrid asks for a bailout limited  speculative euro selling.      Strategists said it was too early to tell what impact the  destruction caused across the Atlantic by the giant storm Sandy  might have on currency markets.      Demand for the dollar tends to rise in times of reduced  appetite to take on risk, but if widespread damage prompted  speculation the Fed might ease policy further to shore up the  economy, the dollar could fall.  
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