Friday, December 7, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Dollar climbs vs euro on US jobs data; Fed eyed

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Dollar climbs vs euro on US jobs data; Fed eyed
Dec 7th 2012, 20:56

Fri Dec 7, 2012 3:56pm EST

  * U.S. non-farm payrolls rise by 146,000 in November      * Euro extends post-ECB fall; Germany cuts growth outlook      * Yen briefly strengthens after Japan earthquake        NEW YORK, Dec 7 (Reuters) - The U.S. dollar gained against  the euro on Friday for the third straight day after the release  of better-than-expected U.S. jobs  data, but less-encouraging  details within the report should  limit the currency's gains  ahead of a Federal Reserve policy meeting next week.      The dollar had soared immediately after the headline data  for November stoked speculation that the U.S. central bank may  opt for a smaller stimulus program. But it pared gains against  the euro and turned slightly lower against the yen as traders  scrutinized the components of the report.      While nonfarm employment increased by 146,000 jobs last  month, showing little apparent impact from superstorm Sandy, job  growth for previous months was revised downward and a drop in  the jobless rate to a near four-year low was due to job seekers  giving up the search for work.       "There's a lot of speculation on how much impact Sandy has  on the data. The number just feels wrong," said Ronald Simpson,  managing director of global currency analysis at Action  Economics in Tampa, Florida. "That's why we've seen things come  unwound back to pre-data levels because everybody is going to  look ahead and wait for the revisions."      The euro fell to a session low of $1.2878 according  to Reuters data, matching the low set on Nov. 28. It was last  trading down 0.3 percent on the day at $1.2924, bringing the  weekly decline to 0.5 percent.       Some $5.6 billion of euros changed hands, according to  Reuters Dealing.      The common currency pared losses in trade before midday,  with traders citing a news report that said senior European  Central Bank Executive Board members - including President Mario  Draghi and Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann - opposed a rate  cut supported by the majority at the ECB's most recent policy  meeting on Thursday.       "Whether this reduces the likelihood of a cut going forward,  the forex market perceives a more hawkish than dovish stance and  created significant short covering," said Andrew Wilkinson,  chief economic strategist at Miller Tabak & Co LLC in New York.      Weakness in the euro came as Germany's central bank said it  expected Europe's largest economy to grow just 0.4 percent in  2013, and pointed to risks of a recession as the euro zone debt  crisis takes its toll.       The euro lost 0.8 percent against the dollar on Thursday  after ECB President Mario Draghi said policymakers had discussed  cutting borrowing costs and slashed growth and inflation  forecasts for the euro zone.      ECB policymaker Jozef Makuch also said the bank may cut  interest rates next year if the euro zone economy does not  improve.       "The euro is still pricing in the earlier-than-expected rate  cut talk that came out of yesterday's ECB press conference,"  said Marc Principato, director of SMB Forex Trading and  Education in New York. "If 1.2985 cannot be broken to the upside  in the next day or two, I believe a test of the 1.2850 support  is more likely in the coming week."      Attention now turns to the Federal Reserve, which begins a  two-day meeting on Tuesday. Policymakers are expected to  maintain support for the tentative U.S. recovery by ramping up  one bond-buying program to offset the expiration of another.      "The real question is whether (the November jobs data)  changes the Fed's attitude toward more stimulus. It doesn't  remove the need for stimulus but might convince the Fed to opt  for a smaller program," said Kathy Lien, managing director of BK  Asset Management in New York.      Fed stimulus is viewed as negative for the dollar because it  equates to printing money, which lowers U.S. bond yields and  diminishes the appeal of holding dollar-denominated assets.      The dollar rallied as high as 82.82 yen on Reuters  data, matching a near eight-month high set on Nov. 22. It was  last trading at 82.42 yen, near flat on the day.       The yen briefly rose against the euro and dollar after news  of an earthquake in Japan. A far more powerful earthquake in  March 2011 led to a sharp rise in the yen on expectations  Japanese investors would repatriate funds held abroad.      Investors also closely watched developments on the U.S.  "fiscal cliff" debate.      Republican House Speaker John Boehner accused President  Barack Obama of pushing the country toward the "fiscal cliff" on  Friday and of wasting another week without progress in the  talks.  
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