Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Dollar weakens as U.S. private jobs, service data weighs

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Dollar weakens as U.S. private jobs, service data weighs
Apr 3rd 2013, 19:21

Wed Apr 3, 2013 3:21pm EDT

  * ADP shows private-sector jobs gain lower than expected      * Dollar sluggish as U.S. nonfarm payrolls data awaited      * U.S. service sector growth slowest in seven months      * Euro vulnerable before ECB meeting on Thursday        By Julie Haviv      NEW YORK, April 3 (Reuters) - The dollar dropped against the  yen on Wednesday after reports showed the U.S. private sector  created fewer jobs than expected and the pace of growth in the  service sector slowed last month, raising concerns that a  recovery in the world's largest economy has stalled.      The weaker-than-expected ADP National Employment Report and  soft service sector number followed a poor U.S. manufacturing  reading on Monday that suggested the economy, which has seen a  run of strong data the last few weeks, has lost some momentum.      Against the yen, the dollar fell 0.6 percent to 92.84 yen   after hitting a session low of 92.69. The U.S. currency  remained well below a 3-1/2-year high of 96.71 yen set last  month.      Analysts said choppy moves in currencies were unlikely  before the end of the Bank of Japan's April 3-4 policy meeting,  in which it is widely expected to ramp up its bond buying and  extend the maturities of the debt it buys.      "Everyone will be watching to see how much in additional  purchases the BoJ will announce and if it will be large in scale  like the U.S Federal Reserve's or marginal and incremental like  they have done in the past," said Ben Emons, senior vice  president/global portfolio manager, at Newport Beach,  California-based PIMCO, which had $2 trillion in assets under  management as of Dec. 31.       "People are in a holding pattern right now and waiting to  see if the BoJ surprises to the upside or downside," he said.      The dollar has climbed roughly 22 percent against the yen  since November, when markets first started pricing in more  aggressive monetary easing from the BoJ.      Emons, who oversees $70 billion in global assets and also  oversees PIMCO's Forex ETF fund, said he expects dollar/yen to  rise again and reach 100 over the next three to six months.      "That's because the Bank of Japan is committed to its 2  percent inflation target, which is different than a goal, so the  yen should weaken on that," he said. "The dollar should also  gain from risk aversion stemming from Europe."      Kathy Lien, director at BK Asset Management in New York,  said the U.S. services sector and ADP numbers do not bode well  for Friday's U.S. employment report.       "This signals the potential for a sizable disappointment  along with further dollar weakness," she said.      ADP on Wednesday reported an increase of 158,000 jobs in  private employment, well below the consensus forecast of  200,000. It also revised up February's jobs number to 237,000  from an initial reading of 198,000, though that did little to  lift sentiment.       Similarly, the Institute for Supply Management said its  services index last month fell to its weakest since August, and  was short of economists' forecasts.       The employment component of the ISM index also dropped,  causing nervousness going into Friday's U.S. nonfarm payrolls  report. Still, not many analysts have revised their forecast.      Analysts are forecasting U.S. payrolls to add 200,000 jobs  in March, with the unemployment rate seen holding steady at 7.7  percent.      The euro hit a session high against the dollar after the ADP  and services sector reports and was last changing hands at  $1.2848, up 0.2 percent on the day.      But the euro zone's common currency looked somewhat  vulnerable given a recent run of weak data which, when added to  political turmoil in Italy and concerns about Cyprus, could lead  European Central Bank President Mario Draghi to strike a dovish  tone in his post-meeting comments on Thursday.  
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