Monday, April 1, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Dollar tumbles vs yen on disappointing U.S. data

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Dollar tumbles vs yen on disappointing U.S. data
Apr 1st 2013, 20:46

Mon Apr 1, 2013 4:46pm EDT

  * U.S. ISM softer than expected, weighs on dollar      * Yen gains broadly but downtrend intact      * Korean tensions buoy safe-haven yen      * Thin trade allows yen to firm despite BoJ easing  expectations        By Julie Haviv      NEW YORK, April 1 (Reuters) - The dollar fell to a nearly  four-week low against the yen on Monday as softer-than-expected  U.S. manufacturing data suggested the economy may have run out  of steam at the end of the first quarter, interrupting a recent  run of generally upbeat data.      The euro, meanwhile, fell to a more than one-month trough  versus the yen as investors favored the safe-haven Japanese  currency following unexpectedly weak Chinese factory activity  and renewed uncertainty in the Korean peninsula.      Volume was thin, with many markets still closed for Easter  holiday, and the low liquidity led to exaggerated currency  moves.      U.S. factory activity grew at the slowest rate in three  months in March, according to the Institute for Supply  Management. Its index of national factory activity fell to 51.3  last month from 54.2 in February. A reading above 50 indicates  expansion in the manufacturing sector.       China's official Purchasing Managers Index reached 50.9 in  March, below market expectations of a jump to 52 from February's  50.1.       "The dollar sold off versus the yen after the disappointing  ISM data, but trade is very thin and investors are likely using  the data as an excuse to lighten dollar positions ahead of this  week's events," said Omer Esiner, chief market analyst at  Commonwealth Foreign Exchange in Washington, D.C.      Both the European Central Bank and Bank of Japan are to hold  monetary policy meetings later this week.      With the path of Federal Reserve policy largely hinging on  the state of the U.S. labor market, Friday's U.S. monthly  payrolls data has the potential to sway financial markets.      "There is a lot of optimism already priced into the dollar  regarding the U.S. economy, and the dollar could be poised for a  sell-off should upcoming data disappoint," Esiner said.      The greenback has rallied broadly this year as evidence  mounted that the U.S. economy is on a stable path to recovery.  The dollar index has gained about 3.6 percent so far in  2013.                         "There are some clear signs that recent growth momentum in  the manufacturing sector will not be easily built," said Alan  Ruskin, head of G10 FX strategy at Deutsche Bank in New York.  "The data will tend to undercut some of the enthusiasm in the  long dollar exposure."       Even so, Ruskin said out the U.S. manufacturing report was  not all "gloom and doom," with both the employment and new  orders components posting new highs.      Against the yen, the dollar fell 0.9 percent to 93.34 yen   after earlier falling as low as 93.16, the lowest since  March 6. The euro dropped 0.7 percent to 119.94 yen,  the lowest since Feb. 27.         KOREAN TENSIONS      Tensions in the Korean Peninsula also supported the yen,  analysts said. South Korea on Monday said it will strike back  quickly if the North stages any attack on its territory after  North Korea earlier said the region is on the brink of a nuclear  war.       Investors earlier brushed off a disappointingly narrow  improvement in Japanese business sentiment over the last quarter  shown by the Bank of Japan's tankan survey, with the focus more  on the central bank's policy review later in the week.       The BoJ is widely expected to scale up its bond buying and  to extend the maturities of the bonds it purchases under its new  governor, Haruhiko Kuroda.      Bets on a radical shift in the BoJ's policy have ramped the  dollar up 20.9 percent against the yen in the last two quarters,  pushing it to a 3-1/2-year high of 96.71 yen last month.      The euro, meanwhile, was up 0.3 percent against the dollar  at $1.2848, rallying from an earlier low of $1.2770.  Europe's common currency was still down 2.6 percent so far this  year and has slid steadily since February, when it hit a  14-month high of $1.3711.      Meanwhile, over the weekend, the Cypriot central bank  confirmed that major depositors in Cyprus's biggest bank would  lose around 60 percent of savings over 100,000 euros, well above  the initially touted cut of 30 to 40 percent.       The euro has major support around $1.2680, a 61.8 percent  retracement of its July-February rally. But a break there could  open the way for a test of last year's low near $1.20.  
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