Sunday, May 26, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Dollar eases against yen as Japanese shares resume slide

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Dollar eases against yen as Japanese shares resume slide
May 27th 2013, 05:43

Mon May 27, 2013 1:43am EDT

* Dollar-yen continues to track Nikkei moves

* Some BOJ members uneasy about feasibility of 2 pct inflation target

* Subdued trade as U.S. and UK markets closed for holidays

By Sophie Knight

TOKYO, May 27 (Reuters) - The dollar lost ground against the yen on Monday as another steep fall in Japanese equities prompted investors to unwind their dollar hedges and head for bonds, extending a trend last Thursday that produced the pair's biggest weekly drop in a year.

The greenback last bought 101.04 yen after choppy trade that saw it climb as high as 101.82 in the early morning session and as low as 100.79 as the Nikkei dropped 4 percent, though shares later narrowed their losses.

However, the dollar managed to hold above Friday's trough of 100.68 yen, with further support at 100.38, the Kijun line on its daily Ichimoku chart. Market participants said a new trend was unlikely to develop on Monday as both U.S. and UK markets are closed for holidays.

"For now the dollar-yen is very much tied to the stock market- and not just the Nikkei, but global shares. I don't think sentiment is turning risk-off, but people are definitely adjusting positions amidst a risk-on environment," said Junya Tanase, executive director of FX at JPMorgan.

"However, in the long-term I think the dollar-yen will be supported by a trend for a weaker yen, because the macro environment has not really changed."

Tanase added that investors were unwinding their dollar-hedges on their Japanese equity portfolios as the Nikkei extended its losses from last week, when the index suffered a 7.3 percent plunge on Thursday that toppled it from a 5-1/2 year high.

"I think that the Nikkei's moves at the moment are more driven by day traders rather than macro data ... the Japanese market has become like a toy," said Makoto Noji, senior strategist at SMBC Nikko Securities.

"I think forex traders are more likely to act on the macro data, especially U.S. data. That's really about whether the Fed will exit QE3 or not."

Yen buying pressure at the end of last week helped to pause the dollar's broad gains in the previous fortnight, which were driven by expectations that the U.S. Federal Reserve may wind down its bond-buying programme earlier than scheduled.

On Monday, the dollar index dipped 0.1 percent to 83.648 after dropping 0.7 percent last week, when Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke told Congress the central bank will not reduce its easing unless the economy showed further signs of improvement.

Japan's central bank, on the other hand, may be expected to ramp up its already aggressive easing programme if its economic indicators do not pick up, according to Ayako Sera, senior market economist at Sumitomo Mitsui Trust.

"A lot of people will be focusing on Friday's consumer price index data after one BOJ member said the 2 percent target looks a bit difficult to achieve," she said, referring to minutes from the BOJ's last policy meeting released on Monday.

The euro edged 0.1 percent off Friday's late U.S. levels to $1.2929 after rising 0.7 percent last week, its first weekly gain in three weeks, supported by signs of improvement in German business morale on Friday.

The next line of resistance for the common currency is said to lie around its 20-day moving average at $1.2992.

Against the Australian dollar the euro edged down 0.3 percent to 1.3416, staying below stops around 1.3500 cited by market participants. The common currency has gained just over 10 percent against the Aussie since April 3, when it hit a nearly five-month low of 1.2213.

Against the U.S. dollar, meanwhile, the Aussie continued to pitch downwards, losing 0.1 percent to $0.9631. Its 7 percent tumble this month has been led by concerns about sluggishness in the Chinese economy that have also hit commodity prices.

If the Aussie remains more than 6.6 percent down on the month by Friday, this would mark its worst month since September 2011, when it fell 9.7 percent.

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