Monday, July 22, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Yen gains on Abe victory; euro up on Portugal optimism

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Yen gains on Abe victory; euro up on Portugal optimism
Jul 22nd 2013, 18:43

Mon Jul 22, 2013 2:43pm EDT

  * Japan's ruling coalition wins upper house majority      * Result broadly in line with expectations      * Euro rises to one-month high vs dollar        By Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss      NEW YORK, July 22 (Reuters) - The yen rose for the first  time in four sessions against the dollar on Monday after  Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe won a widely-expected victory  in elections for the parliament's upper house.      Investors had already priced in Abe's victory and had sold  the yen against the dollar ahead of the outcome, and market  participants locked in profits as a result. The victory  represents a rare bout of political stability in Japan and  strengthens the mandate for Abe's reflationary policies.      The euro, meanwhile, rose to a one-month high versus the  dollar after Portuguese President Anibal Cavaco Silva said the  current government will stay in office to keep an international  bailout on track.      But it was the yen that hogged the headlines in the currency  market. Although Abe's victory affirmed Japan's aggressive  monetary easing, some analysts said at this point there's not  much the government can do to stimulate the economy.      "Primarily, the yen's rise against the dollar was a  buy-the-rumor, sell-the-fact kind of thing," said Vassili  Serebriakov, currency strategist at BNP Paribas in New York.      "But at the end of the day, Japan can only do so much to  lift its economy and the dollar's upside could be limited."      In early afternoon trading, the dollar was down 1.2 percent  at 99.50 yen, closer to the session low of 99.28 than the  session peak of 100.71 yen.       The dollar, however, was still up around 15 percent versus  the yen for the year as the Bank of Japan opted for  unprecedented monetary stimulus to jump-start the economy. The  yen remains the worst-performing currency year to date of the 36  most active currencies traded against the dollar, using Reuters  data.      The euro also fell against the yen to 131.30 yen,  down 0.6 percent, having risen to a two-month high of 132.43  earlier.      Still, many investors view the yen's bounce as temporary  with a dip in the dollar seen as a buying opportunity, traders  said. Speculators remained long the dollar against the yen going  into the election and that was not forecast to change after  Abe's win.       Analysts said the election result would also increase  Japanese investor conviction about the success of the reforms,  potentially driving them to seek higher yields overseas.      With the focus on the Japanese election now over, attention  will turn back to the United States and the direction of the  dollar against the yen for the rest of the week will likely be  driven by U.S. economic data, said Boris Schlossberg, managing  director of FX Strategy at BK Asset Management in New York.       The dollar earlier extended losses against the yen after  data showed U.S. existing home sales for June fell 1.2 percent  rather than the 0.6 gain expected. But a surge in prices to a  five-year high suggested the housing market recovery remained on  course.       "We find ourselves in an environment where sub-par numbers  on U.S. activity and inflation are being viewed as a positive  for risk appetite, as they further postpone an eventual  withdrawal of liquidity by the Fed," said Samarjit Shankar,  director of market strategy at BNY Mellon in Boston.      Most riskier currencies rallied on Monday, with the  Australian and New Zealand dollars as well as sterling up on the  day.      The euro was up 0.3 percent at $1.3187, after earlier  rising to a one-month high of $1.3218, with investors relieved  by a drop in Portuguese bond yields.  
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