Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Dollar gains after U.S. election, fiscal worries dominate

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Dollar gains after U.S. election, fiscal worries dominate
Nov 7th 2012, 17:16

Wed Nov 7, 2012 12:16pm EST

  * Investors look past Obama re-election to focus on 'fiscal  cliff'      * ECB's Draghi: euro zone to remain weak in the near term      * Greece, Spain worries dent euro sentiment        By Wanfeng Zhou      NEW YORK, Nov 7 (Reuters) - The dollar rose to a two-month  high against major currencies on Wednesday as investors shifted  focus to U.S. fiscal woes after President Barack Obama's  re-election, bolstering the appeal of the safe-haven U.S.  currency.      The euro came under pressure after ECB President Draghi said  the bank expects the euro zone economy to remain weak "in the  near term," adding to investor nervousness ahead of the central  bank's policy meeting on Thursday.      The U.S. president faces a fresh challenge confronting the  "fiscal cliff," a mix of tax increases and spending cuts due to  extract some $600 billion from the economy starting Jan. 1  barring a deal with Congress.       "Key macroeconomic and event risks persist, including the  ability of U.S. policy-makers to effectively address the looming  U.S. 'fiscal cliff' and the unrelenting negative news flow  emanating from the euro zone's sovereign debt crisis," said  Samarjit Shankar, managing director of global FX strategy at BNY  Mellon in Boston.      "These may prove to be supportive of the greenback as  investors stay cautious."      The dollar index, which tracks the greenback versus a basket  of currencies, rose 0.3 percent to 80.812, having hit as  high as 80.924, its highest since Sept. 7.      In the past several years, the dollar has tended to benefit  from bad news about the global economy, even when the worries  stem from the United States, because investors see the U.S.  Treasury market as a safe haven.      "And while there's evidence that relation has moderated,  it's still there," said Ron Leven, senior currency strategist at  Morgan Stanley in New York.      The euro fell as low as $1.2734 on Reuters data, a  two-month low, hurt by grim economic forecasts for the euro zone  and continued sovereign debt-related worries in Greece and  Spain. It was last at $1.2761, down 0.4 percent.  Against the yen, it lost 1.1 percent to 101.87 yen.      The currency faced further pressure ahead of a Greek  parliamentary vote on austerity measures necessary to secure the  next tranche of bailout cash, without which the country faces  bankruptcy.       "If the Greek vote doesn't go through, there is a lot of  downside risk to the euro as talk of a Greece exit will  re-emerge," said Jane Foley, senior currency strategist at  Rabobank.      Prime Minister Antonis Samaras is expected to narrowly win  but the smallest party in his coalition will oppose the  measures, leaving him with a margin of just a handful of votes.         The market also remained concerned that Spain could delay  seeking international aid.      The European Central Bank will decide on interest rates on  Thursday and while no change is expected, a slew of grim data  out of the euro zone is likely to keep alive chances of further  cuts.      Earlier in the day, the clear-cut U.S. election result had  lifted stocks and riskier currencies. The higher-yielding  Australian dollar rose to its highest in nearly seven weeks  against the greenback and the Canadian dollar hit a three-week  peak.      But that trend soon fizzled out as investors turned their  attention to the euro zone's problems and the U.S. fiscal cliff.      Some analysts said strength in the dollar could be limited  as Obama's win means the Federal Reserve's monetary policy is  likely to remain accommodative.      Against the yen, the dollar fell to as low as 79.79 yen   on Reuters data, well below its six-month high of 80.67  hit last week. It was last down 0.6 percent at 79.86 as yields  on U.S. Treasuries fell sharply.       Analysts at Morgan Stanley said they are maintaining their  bullish strategy for dollar/yen and expected a re-test of the  80.70 high, with a break above there opening the way for gains  towards their 84.00 target.  
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