Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Euro rises vs dollar ahead of ECB; yen tumbles broadly

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Euro rises vs dollar ahead of ECB; yen tumbles broadly
Feb 5th 2013, 15:09

Tue Feb 5, 2013 10:09am EST

  * Euro rises more than 1 percent vs yen      * Euro uptrend seen intact, traders look to buy on dips      * Euro lifted by above-forecast euro zone services PMI      * Yen hits fresh 2-1/2-year high vs dollar        By Julie Haviv      NEW YORK, Feb 5 (Reuters) - The euro rose against the dollar  and yen on Tuesday, returning to its months-long trend of  appreciation, as better-than-expected euro zone data affirmed  expectations that the European Central Bank will keep policy  steady when it meets this week.      While the euro gained ground, it remained vulnerable to  profit taking, especially with its recent sharp and swift move  higher drawing the attention of policymakers.      French President Francois Hollande called on the euro zone  on Tuesday to protect the currency from "irrational movements",  but German Economy Minister Philipp Roesler said countries must  focus on boosting competitiveness and not on cutting the value  of their currency.       The comments did not have an immediate impact on the euro,  but served as an indication of the growing split among leaders  on the euro's strength, and this could check its further gains.      Nevertheless, investors bought the euro as upbeat economic  data affirmed that the worst of the region's debt crisis is  likely over.      The euro zone's battered economy is probably recovering but  the gulf between its two biggest members is widening, according  to a survey on Tuesday that showed business optimism in the bloc  at an eight-month high.       Euro zone data showed the services sector had improved more  than expected in January.       The euro earlier hit a low as political uncertainty weighed  on the currency. In Spain, the prime minister is facing calls to  resign and Italy holds a general election later this month.         "While investors are inclined to take profits on the euro  ahead of the ECB meeting, any weakness will likely become a  buying opportunity," said Omer Esiner, chief market analyst at  Commonwealth Foreign Exchange in Washington D.C.         "Should Draghi hold a relatively upbeat news conference on  Thursday that echoes the one he held last month it will be a  green light for the euro to return to recent highs," he said.       The euro last traded at $1.3524, up 0.1 percent on the day,  but was still well below a near 15-month high of $1.3711 struck  on Friday. Chart support was seen at $1.3414, a low hit on  January 29.      The ECB is unlikely to contemplate an interest rate cut at  Thursday's policy meeting despite the euro's sharp rise, but its  chief almost certainly faces a grilling afterwards over an  Italian banking scandal.       The euro's strength will need to show significant harm to   the economy before the Governing Council reverses course, and  there is next-to-no chance of that happening at its monthly  meeting.                "Draghi will likely refrain from explicitly talking down the  euro but he might try to tone down his outlook for euro zone  growth and inflation. A correction lower in euro/dollar could be  on the cards if we see more profit-taking on euro longs," said  Valentin Marinov, head of European G10 FX strategy at CitiFX, a  division of Citigroup.      "That said I don't see outright shorts being put in place  ahead of the ECB given the risks for potential further gains if  the ECB decides to ignore the euro appreciation for now."            YEN WEAKNESS      Bank of Japan governor Masaaki Shirakawa said he would step  down on March 19, three weeks before the official end of his  term. He is likely to be replaced with someone who is amenable  to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's drive to ease policy aggressively  and get Japan out of deflation.       The dollar rose as high as 93.51 yen, its highest since  mid-2010. It last traded at 93.18 yen, up 0.9 percent on  the day, according to Reuters data.      The euro last traded at 126.08 yen, up 0.8 percent  on the day, edging closer to the 34-month high of 126.96 hit  last Friday.      Strategists said further yen weakness could be checked due  to growing opposition from other countries before a G20 meeting  in Moscow later this month.       "Japan could face a growing backlash about its recent  policies which has produced a sustained yen weakness and given  that euro was the currency that appreciated the most this could  mean the Europeans in particular could complain about the loss  of international competitiveness," Marinov said.  
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