Friday, November 30, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Euro rises for fourth straight month against dollar

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Euro rises for fourth straight month against dollar
Nov 30th 2012, 21:41

Fri Nov 30, 2012 4:41pm EST

  * Euro hits 7-month high vs yen, more than 5-week high vs  dollar      * U.S. fiscal talks dominate traders attention      * Expectations of BoJ easing add to selling pressure on yen        By Wanfeng Zhou      NEW YORK, Nov 30 (Reuters) - The euro rose to its highest in  more than five weeks against the dollar on Friday, posting its  fourth straight month of gains as investors clung to hopes that  U.S. politicians would reach a fiscal deal before the end of the  year.      The yen slumped and registered its worst month since  February against the dollar on speculation that a likely change  in Japan's government would lead to aggressive monetary easing.  Speculators boosted their bets against the yen to the highest  since May, 2007.       For the past few weeks, financial markets have traded on  headlines from U.S. political leaders on the "fiscal cliff," tax  hikes and spending cuts worth $600 billion set to kick in early  next year that could hurt the economy.      U.S. House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner said  Republicans and President Barack Obama are locked in a  stalemate. Obama blamed Republicans who control the House for  holding up a deal.        "The market is sort of anticipating that some kind of a  compromise will be reached before December 31. That's the  mindset of the market right now," said Fabian Eliasson, vice  president of currency sales at Mizuho Corporate Bank in New  York.      The euro rose 0.2 percent to $1.3001, having earlier  touched $1.3027 on Reuters data, its strongest level since Oct.  23. Traders reported offers at $1.3040-50.      For the month, the euro rose 0.3 percent against the dollar.      German lawmakers on Friday approved the latest Greek bailout  by a large majority, also helping euro sentiment. But the  outcome was widely expected.       Gains in Europe's shared currency came despite weak data  that included a sharp drop in German retail sales, a fall in  French consumer spending and record-high unemployment for the  euro zone.         The gloomy economic outlook for the euro zone should limit  further strength in the euro, analysts said.      "With unemployment still sitting at 11 percent in the euro  zone and inflation at just 2 percent, I can't see how the euro  can move up from here, other than people looking at an  alternative to the dollar," said Chris Gaffney, co-chief  investment officer at Everbank Wealth Management in St. Louis.      The euro dipped to session lows against the dollar after  weak U.S. personal income and spending data. The data dented the  market's risk appetite as investors sought the dollar for its  safety appeal.       "The disappointing data has dampened the modest enthusiasm  that major economies are gaining strength," said Joe Manimbo,  senior market analyst at Western Union Business Solutions in  Washington. "The report also reinforces the fact that U.S.  growth in Q4 would be weak."       The dollar rose 0.5 percent to 82.51 yen, close to a  near eight-month high of 82.82 yen hit last week. It was on pace  for a gain of 3.4 percent in November, the biggest since  February.      The euro rose 0.6 percent to 107.19 yen. Earlier  it climbed to 107.66, its highest since late April. Traders  cited month-end demand for the euro from Japanese importers.       In November, the euro rallied 3.7 percent, the best month  since June against the yen.      Although Japan's main opposition leader, Shinzo Abe, a  front-runner to become the new prime minister, seemed to have  softened his aggressive stance on Bank of Japan independence, he  did reiterate his desire for the bank to buy foreign bonds.         "The market is gearing up toward the December 16 election,"  said Eliasson. He said with growing expectations of further  easing, the dollar could rise further, to 85 to 87 yen, if the  election goes as expected.        The dollar index ended the month of November up 0.3  percent after three straight months of losses.  
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