Thursday, March 14, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Dollar drops vs euro, yen on profit taking after rally

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Dollar drops vs euro, yen on profit taking after rally
Mar 14th 2013, 18:29

Thu Mar 14, 2013 2:29pm EDT

  * Dollar retreats from 7-month peak, sentiment positive      * Strong U.S. data contrasts with weak euro zone numbers      * Technicals point to key euro/dollar and dollar/yen levels      * Swiss franc, Norway crown fall after policy decisions        By Julie Haviv      NEW YORK, March 14 (Reuters) - The dollar dropped from a  seven-month high against a basket of currencies on Thursday as  investors opted to book profits on concerns it may have rallied  too quickly recently due to  optimism about the U.S. economy.      While the dollar fell from a three-month peak against the  euro and retreated from a 3-1/2-year high versus the yen hit  earlier in the week, analysts say the outlook for the U.S.  currency remains bright on expectations the U.S. economy is  outperforming its major counterparts.      Indeed, the number of Americans filing new claims for  unemployment benefits dropped for a third straight week last  week, the latest indication the labor market recovery was  gaining traction.       Other reports over the past week highlighted improvement in  the U.S. labor market and consumer spending. The state of the  jobs market is key to U.S. Federal Reserve policy. Should this  sector continue to show marked strength the Fed may reconsider  its bond buying program, called quantitative easing.      The Fed's bond buying is tantamount to printing money and  therefore dilutes the dollar's value.      "Euro/dollar is eyeing the 200-day moving average at $1.2867  as the next downside target after yesterday's clean break below  congestive support at $1.3000," said George Davis, chief  technical analyst at RBC Capital Markets in Toronto.      "As the 200-day moving average is often used as a guide for  long-term trend direction, a daily close below this level would  suggest that bullish sentiment is eroding and introduce downside  risks from a longer-term perspective," he said.      The euro last traded at $1.3018, up 0.5 percent on  the day, rebounding from a session low of $1.2910, the weakest  since Dec. 10. Support lies around $1.2876, the 50 percent  retracement of the euro's rise from July to February.      Davis said a close above the $1.3089 level is required in  order to trigger a euro/dollar retracement phase, but the recent  bearish medium-term trend reversal below $1.3213 suggests that  valuation-driven retracements toward $1.3259 and $1.3331 will  attract renewed selling interest.       The dollar index, which measures the value of the greenback  versus a basket of currencies, fell 0.4 percent to 82.558  . It had earlier risen as high as 83.166 on Reuters data,  the highest since Aug. 3.      Contrasting with a positive U.S. growth outlook, euro zone  employment fell 0.3 percent in the last three months of 2012,  data showed on Thursday, intensifying concerns about the  region's economic outlook. Data on Wednesday showed a  bigger-than-expected drop in euro zone factory output in January         "We're at a point right now where we're going to need some  significantly positive news to help the dollar post its next leg  higher," said Omer Esiner, chief market analyst, Commonwealth  Foreign Exchange, Washington.       "We're going to need confirmation from upcoming U.S.  economic data that the optimism surrounding the U.S. recovery is  justified."      Political uncertainty in Italy and a likely bailout for  Cyprus also kept the euro under pressure. Investors also focused  on a EU summit that will discuss budget policies, with signs  that France, Spain and Portugal could be given more time to meet  their deficit goals as long as they maintain a debt-cutting  trend.             DOLLAR SLIPS VERSUS YEN      The dollar last traded at 95.86 yen, down 0.2 percent  one the day. Expectations of aggressive policy easing from the  Bank of Japan are expected to underpin the dollar, with many  traders looking for a retest of the 3 1/2-year high of 96.71 yen  hit on Tuesday.      RBC's Davis said the sharp uptrend that has driven  dollar/yen higher since last October remains in place.       "Although valuations have moved to overbought levels yet  again and increase the scope for a correction, a return back  below support at 94.97 yen will be required at a minimum in  order to suggest that a retracement is at hand," he said.      "The broader uptrend that is in place suggests that  valuation-driven pullbacks to 93.72 yen and 92.58 yen should  attract renewed buying interest," he said.      The euro rose 0.1 percent to 124.72 yen, still  some way from the 34-month peak around 127.70 set last month.      Meanwhile, the dollar rose to a six-month peak against the  Swiss franc and the Norwegian crown after central  bank policy decisions and accompanying comments in Switzerland  and Norway pushed those currencies lower.  
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