Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Euro slides as risk appetite fades on Greece, U.S. fiscal woes

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Euro slides as risk appetite fades on Greece, U.S. fiscal woes
Nov 28th 2012, 14:20

Wed Nov 28, 2012 9:20am EST

  * Greek deal provides only brief lift      * German lawmakers expected to pass deal on Friday      * Yen regains ground as investors unwind short positions        By Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss      NEW YORK, Nov 28 (Reuters) - The euro fell broadly on  Wednesday as risk appetite waned on worries about how a deal on  Greek debt will be implemented and persistent concerns about  whether U.S. lawmakers can agree on a deal to prevent potential  tax increases and spending cuts.      The yen, seen as a safe haven during times of economic  uncertainty, was the main beneficiary of investor flows. It also  gained support from investors paring back aggressive  expectations of monetary easing by the Bank of Japan in coming  months.      "The market remains cautious on the single currency as  traders do not seem convinced that the agreement yesterday on  Greek aid is all it is proposed to be," said Matthew Lifson,  senior analyst and trader at Cambridge Mercantile Group in  Princeton, New Jersey.      "There are still major concerns that the Greek government  will not be able to meet the obligations set forth at the latest  finance minister's meeting."      The euro fell 0.5 percent to $1.2886, as  institutional and Russian investors sold. Traders cited bids at  $1.2870 and $1.2850, which could limit losses in the near term  with some attributing the euro's weakness to talk of dollar  demand for month-end portfolio adjustments.      The euro also fell to a 2-1/2 month low against the Swiss  franc, another safe haven, at 1.2024. It was last at  1.2035, down slightly on the day.      The single currency has fallen from a one-month high against  the dollar of $1.3010, struck after international lenders agreed  a plan to cut Greek debt earlier this week, allowing the country  to avoid a chaotic default.       But a lack of detail and growing scepticism over how Athens  will implement the reforms needed to reach the new targets made  investors wary of adding euros to their portfolios.      The deal is still subject to approval from German lawmakers,  which some say could weigh on the euro, although it is widely  expected to be approved on Friday.      With the Greek deal out of the way, investors focused on the  so-called U.S. 'fiscal cliff,' a combination of automatic tax  increases and spending cuts due to kick in at the beginning of  the year that could tip the world's biggest economy into  recession and depress the global outlook.      The U.S. Congress pushed toward compromise on Tuesday but  agreement with the administration still appeared elusive.       "If (the U.S. talks) go well, the relief on peripheral  assets may have legs, including the euro. If it goes badly, even  France may get questioned by an uncertain market, and we would  expect the euro to suffer," Barclays strategists said in a note.      Comments by U.S. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid about the  lack of progress by Democratic and Republican lawmakers also  fanned concerns, and added to demand for the dollar and yen.      The dollar index was up 0.2 percent at 80.551.                YEN REGAINS GROUND      The yen rose as investors unwound long dollar and euro  positions built in recent weeks on expectations a fresh election  on Dec. 16 will see a new Prime Minister elected. The new  Japanese leader is widely expected to put pressure on the Bank  of Japan to further ease monetary policy.      The Japanese currency had lost about 4 percent against the  dollar over the past two weeks as investors started to price in  aggressive monetary policy action after the Japanese election.      Shinzo Abe, who is likely to emerge as premier, has called  for more aggressive easing, but some investors have begun to  question how much impact he will have on monetary policy.         The dollar fell 0.4 percent to 81.81 yen, retreating  from last week's 7-1/2 month high of 82.84 yen. Market players  cited demand for the dollar at 81.70 yen and said this was  likely to check the Japanese currency's gains.      "While most traders believe there will be an eventual  agreement on 'fiscal cliff' negotiations, they are hedging their  bets and this will keep pressure on the dollar against the yen  in the near term," said Cambridge's Lifson.         The euro also fell against the yen, dropping 0.8 percent on  the day to 105.49 yen, moving away from a seven-month  high of 107.135 yen set on Monday.  
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