Monday, December 24, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Dollar slides in thin trading; yen weakens as well

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Dollar slides in thin trading; yen weakens as well
Dec 24th 2012, 14:56

Mon Dec 24, 2012 9:56am EST

  * Yen close to 20-month low versus dollar      * Abe to become Japan's prime minister on Wednesday      * U.S. fiscal talks impasse seen supporting dollar into  year-end          By Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss      NEW YORK, Dec 24 (Reuters) - The dollar skidded on Monday in  thin trading as investors locked in profits ahead of the  Christmas holiday, although losses could be limited by continued  uncertainty about the ongoing U.S. budget talks to avert a toxic  mix of higher taxes and spending cuts.      The greenback tends to benefit as a safe haven from any bad  news on the U.S. fiscal front.      The yen also weakened, trading near a 20-month low against  the dollar, after incoming prime minister Shinzo Abe heaped  fresh pressure on the Bank of Japan to adopt a higher inflation  target. Abe said on Sunday he would try to revise a law  guaranteeing the BoJ's independence if his demand for a binding  2 percent inflation target -- double its current goal -- is not  met.       "It's mostly position adjustment for the dollar more than  anything else because last Friday, the dollar rallied," said   Omer Esiner, chief market analyst, at Commonwealth Foreign  Exchange in Washington.      On Friday, the dollar firmed across the board as investors  sought safety, worried about America's failed fiscal cliff  talks. That diminished investors' appetite for riskier assets.       News that Republican Speaker of the House John Boehner was  unable to muster enough votes among his own party for his "Plan  B" alternative to President B arack O bama's proposal spooked the  markets.      "Negotiations behind closed doors are likely continuing and  some type of deal to avoid a major fiscal crisis is still  possible," Esiner said. "However, every passing day increases  the risk of going over the cliff, which remains positive for the  dollar in the near-term."      The euro was up 0.2 percent on the day at $1.3212.  Offers were c ited above $1.3240. It hit an eight-month high of  $1.33085 last Wednesday after speculators cut bets against the  currency in recent weeks.      The dollar index was down 0.1 percent at 79.509       Against the yen, the dollar was up 0.6 percent on the day at  84.68 yen. Chartists said the dollar needed to overcome  85.05 yen, its 200-week moving average, for it to sustain  further gains.      "There has been some pretty significant yen selling all  through the night and into this morning," said Peter Kinsella,  currency strategist at Commerzbank.       "It is very noticeable we have not seen any retracement or  dip in dollar/yen at all. The market is really saying they are  convinced on yen weakness and that is what we are going to see  for the remainder of this year and in the course of next year."      The U.S. currency hit a 20-month high of 84.62 yen last  Wednesday as the yen fell after a landslide election victory for  Abe's Liberal Democratic Party.       Abe, set to become Japan's prime minister on Wednesday, has  called for aggressive monetary stimulus by the BOJ to beat  deflation and this has dragged on the yen.      However some strategists said further dollar gains against  the yen could be limited, given the extremely bearish  positioning on the Japanese currency.                    CLIFF CONCERNS      The yen also fell against the euro. The single currency was  up 0.7 percent on the day at 111.85 yen, not far from  a 16-month high of 112.59 yen, hit on Dec. 19.      Strategists said developments on the Italian elections and  Greece could see it grind higher in thin year-end trading.  However, if an impasse over the so-called U.S. "fiscal cliff"  deepened, investors could sell it for the more liquid dollar.      Some U.S. lawmakers voiced concerns on Sunday that the  country would go over cliff, triggering tax increases and  spending cuts early next year that could push the economy back  into recession.       Focus has shifted to Congress acting after Jan. 1.      Marc Chandler, global head of FX strategy at Brown Brothers  Harriman in New York, believes the U.S. government will go over  the cliff in January, but a deal will be eventually worked out.  
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