Thursday, January 3, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Euro falls to near three-week low against dollar

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Euro falls to near three-week low against dollar
Jan 3rd 2013, 18:30

Thu Jan 3, 2013 1:30pm EST

  * Euro retraces gains after failure to rise above $1.33      * Focus shifts to Friday's jobs data, debt ceiling debate      * Yen up vs dollar after hitting highest since July 2010          NEW YORK, Jan 3 (Reuters) - The euro slipped to a near  three-week low against the dollar on Thursday as optimism over a  U.S. budget deal quickly faded and investors looked ahead to the  release Friday of a closely watched U.S. government jobs report.      The euro had surged early on Wednesday after U.S. lawmakers  reached an agreement to avert a "fiscal cliff" of austerity  measures, in the way of huge tax hikes and spending cuts, that  some economists feared would tip the world's biggest economy  back into recession.      But the euro surrendered those gains as investors turned  their focus to further budget battles ahead. Analysts say the  market could be set up for volatility as President Barack Obama  and congressional Republicans tussle over the next two months.      "After yesterday's big move, the market is just taking a  little bit of a breather here," said Amarjit Sahota, director of  Klarity FX in San Francisco.      "Focus is now turning to the debt ceiling and the spending  cuts, which still need to be agreed."      Republicans, angry that the fiscal cliff deal did little to  curb the federal deficit, promised to use the debt-ceiling  debate to win deep spending cuts next time.       The euro was last down 0.6 percent to $1.3109, in a  second straight session of declines. It had earlier dropped to  $1.3082 according to Reuters data, the weakest since Dec. 14,  after stop-loss sell orders were triggered below $1.3090.       Traders said the euro's failure to break above $1.33 in the  previous session drew sellers into the market.      Strategists said the current weakness in the euro could  persist as the euro zone economy falls deeper into recession and  on increasing prospects of an interest rate cut by the European  Central Bank.      Highlighting market concerns that the U.S. deficit issue  remain unresolved, ratings agency Moody's Investors Service said  the United States must do more to rescue its Aaa debt rating  from its current negative outlook.      Standard & Poor's said the fiscal deal does not affect its  negative view of the U.S. credit outlook, and said more work  remained ahead for policymakers.             NONFARM PAYROLLS      Adding to gains in the dollar versus the euro was data  showing U.S. private-sector employers added more new jobs than  expected last month.      Separate data showed U.S. initial jobless claims rose last  week, but the trend remained consistent with steady job growth.         Later in the session, the Federal Reserve will release the  minutes of its most recent policy meeting.       On Friday, the U.S. government will release its closely  watched monthly nonfarm payrolls report. The economy likely  added 150,000 in December, according to a Reuters survey of  economists, up from 146,000 in November. The unemployment rate  is expected to hold steady at 7.7 percent.      The euro fell 1.1 percent to 113.89 yen as  investors bet that its rise to an 18-month high of 115.99 yen on  Wednesday was too far, too fast.       "Euro/yen at around 115 levels was starting to look a bit  overdone and the euro may actually lose ground against the yen  in the coming weeks," said Colin Asher, senior economist at  Mizuho Corporate Bank.      The dollar fell 0.5 percent to 86.89 yen, after  climbing as high as 87.36 earlier in the global session, the  highest since July 2010.      Over the past few weeks, the yen has weakened on  expectations that a new Japanese government led by Prime  Minister Shinzo Abe will push the Bank of Japan into further  monetary easing to beat deflation.      Analysts said the yen is likely to remain vulnerable until  the BOJ's policy meeting on Jan. 21-22.      The Australian dollar rose 0.1 percent to $1.0508   after a 1-percent rally the previous day, supported by data  showing China's services sector expanded in December.  
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