Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Yen falls sharply as Japan's Abe vows to weaken it

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Yen falls sharply as Japan's Abe vows to weaken it
Dec 26th 2012, 21:30

Wed Dec 26, 2012 4:30pm EST

  * Abe, new Japanese prime minister, vows to battle deflation      * BoJ minutes show some called for action if economy worsens      * Attention to shift back to U.S. "fiscal cliff" discussions        By Wanfeng Zhou      NEW YORK, Dec 26 (Reuters) - The yen tumbled to a more than  two-year low against the dollar and a 16-month trough versus the  euro on Wednesday after Japan's new prime minister repeated his  vow to battle deflation and a strong Japanese currency.      Expectations that Shinzo Abe, who took office on Wednesday,  will force the Bank of Japan to ease monetary policy further  have caused steep losses in the yen, putting it on track for a  drop of more than 10 percent this year, the biggest since 2005.      Trading volume was light as many global financial centers  remained closed for the Christmas holiday. All Group of 10  markets except Japan were closed on Tuesday, and only Japanese  and U.S. markets were open on Wednesday.      Abe promised aggressive monetary easing by the Bank of Japan  and big fiscal spending by the debt-laden government to fight  deflation and weaken the yen to make Japanese exports more  competitive. Investors will wait to see if the talks will be  backed by policy action.       "Since the yen's sharp sell-off has come mostly from  jaw-boning on the part of Mr. Abe, the yen could soon find its  scope for further depreciation may slow in the absence of policy  initiatives by the country's new administration," said Joe  Manimbo, senior market analyst at Western Union Business  Solutions, in Washington.      The dollar rose as high as 85.70 yen on Reuters data,  its strongest level since mid-September 2010, breaking through  resistance at its 200-week moving average around 84.95 yen. It  last stood at 85.61 yen, up 1 percent on the day.      The yen also came under pressure after minutes of the Bank  of Japan's November policy meeting released on Wednesday showed  some board members considered policy options if the outlook for  the economy and prices were to worsen.       One board member even suggested that the BoJ commit to  buying assets in an open-ended manner, without setting a strict  deadline, until the central bank achieved its 1 percent consumer  inflation target.       Comments from Japanese Finance Minister Taro Aso that he was  instructed by Abe to loosen the limits on bond issuance under  the stimulus package also hit the yen..      Boris Schlossberg, managing director of FX strategy at BK  Asset Management in New York, said the yen could hit Abe's  ultimate target of 90 yen to the dollar if he continues to keep  pressure on the BoJ to loosen its stance further.      The euro rose 1.3 percent to 113.22 yen, having  risen as high as 113.39 yen, a 16-month high.      Resistance is around the euro's 200-week moving average  around 115.00 yen. The euro has not closed above that average  since late September 2008.      The U.S. dollar index was little changed at 79.607,  with investors awaiting developments on the U.S. fiscal front.  On Tuesday, it rose to 79.780, the highest since Dec. 14.      President Barack Obama is due back in Washington early on  Thursday for a final effort to negotiate a deal with Congress to  avert or at least postpone the "fiscal cliff" of tax increases  and government spending cuts set to begin next week.         No specific bill dealing with the "cliff" was on the  schedule of either the U.S. Senate or House of Representatives,  which are expected to return on Thursday.      "The safe harbor buck remained broadly in favor amid unease  and worry that the U.S. economy might topple over the dreaded  'fiscal cliff' early next year if Washington can't reach a debt  accord by Monday," Manimbo said.      Against the dollar, the euro rose 0.3 percent to $1.3222  . Traders said the euro's gain was due to position  adjustments going into the end of the year, with investors  continuing to reduce short bets on the currency.      "It has been year-end flows more than anything else for  euro/dollar. It's extremely quiet and even small moves tend to  get exaggerated," said Brian Daingerfield, currency strategist  at RBS Securities in Stamford, Connecticut.  
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