Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Dollar hits 4-year high vs yen, close to 100-yen mark

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Dollar hits 4-year high vs yen, close to 100-yen mark
Apr 10th 2013, 19:56

Wed Apr 10, 2013 3:56pm EDT

  * Policymakers eyed ending bond-buys this year -Fed minutes      * Euro briefly supported by talk of Japanese portfolio flows      * Options market shows neutral dollar and yen risk reversals      * U.S. stocks hit record high        By Julie Haviv      NEW YORK, April 10 (Reuters) - The dollar rose to a  four-year high against the yen on Wednesday, edging closer to  the key 100-yen mark after minutes of the U.S. Federal Reserve's  March meeting raised expectations it will finish its bond-buying  spree by the end of the year.      The U.S. central bank's stance contrasts starkly with  aggressive monetary easing steps from the Bank of Japan, which  last week pledged to pump about $1.4 trillion into the economy  in less than two years in a bid to beat decades-long deflation.      According to the Fed minutes, which were released hours  ahead of schedule, a few Fed policymakers expected to taper the  pace of asset purchases by mid-year and end them later this  year, while several others expected to slow the pace a bit later  and halt the quantitative easing program by year-end.         "Once again, the minutes have sounded a slightly more  hawkish tone and that's really what's benefiting dollar/yen,"  said Omer Esiner, chief market analyst at Commonwealth Foreign  Exchange in Washington.      The Fed's quantitative easing program is tantamount to  printing money and dilutes the value of the dollar. The March  minutes, however, may not reflect the current mindset of Fed  officials in the aftermath of data last week showing tepid jobs  growth last month.      The Fed has said it would continue its bond-buying program  until the labor market improves substantially. Weekly U.S.  jobless claims data to be released on Thursday will provide  another glimpse into the sector.      After breaking technical resistance at 99.73 yen - which was  a 50 percent retracement of the dollar's drop from its June 2007  high of 124.14 yen to a record low of 75.311 yen set in October  2011 - the dollar rose to a session high of 99.87 yen,  its highest level since April 2009.      The dollar last traded at 99.84 yen, up 0.8 percent on the  day, according to Reuters data.      In the options market, demand for protection against the  dollar's decline has dissipated, with three-month risk-reversals   trading close to neutral.      Demand had been biased for dollar puts, the right to sell  dollars, throughout March, but last week's BoJ announcement has  essentially served to erase the need for that protection.      The yen temporarily recouped losses after BoJ Governor  Haruhiko Kuroda said the bank has taken all necessary steps for  now in its easing program, but the bounce was short-lived.      Kuroda also said the bank was resolved to keep printing  money for as long as needed to achieve 2 percent inflation,  signaling his readiness to offer further stimulus or maintain an  ultra-easy policy beyond two years if meeting the target by then  proves difficult.       "He is saying 'for now' that tells me he will opt for  further easing in the future," said Neil Jones, head of hedge  fund FX sales at Mizuho Corporate Bank in London. Jones said the  BOJ's attempt to reach 2 percent inflation would imply  dollar/yen trading at 110.00.      Traders said hefty options barriers around 100 yen could  slow the dollar's rise, but an eventual break above that level  looked inevitable.      The euro last traded 0.6 percent higher at 130.34 yen  , having risen as high as 130.50 yen on Reuters data,  its strongest level since January 2010.      Against the dollar, the euro was at $1.3058, down 0.2  percent on the day, as investors opted to book profits after it   hit a one-month peak of $1.3121.      In recent days, the euro has received some support from  market speculation that Japanese investors looking for higher  returns may opt for euro zone assets.      Expectations of Japanese buying have pushed French, Dutch,  Belgian and Austrian bond yields to record lows.      Chinese import data buoyed the Australian dollar, while  stock markets around the world rallied, with the S&P 500   breaking its previous record intraday high, set on Oct. 11,  2007. The Dow hit another intraday milestone, also  rising to a record high.  
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