Friday, August 16, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Dollar firms in Asia after previous session's gyrations

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Dollar firms in Asia after previous session's gyrations
Aug 16th 2013, 06:18

Fri Aug 16, 2013 2:18am EDT

  * Mixed U.S. data sends unclear signals on Fed policy  outlook      * TIC data raises concerns about long-term pressure on  dollar      * NZ dollar tumbles from 2-month high after Wellington quake        By Lisa Twaronite      TOKYO, Aug 16 (Reuters) - The dollar firmed in subdued Asian  trade on Friday after uncertainty about the U.S. Federal  Reserve's stimulus withdrawal knocked it off an 11-day peak  against the yen in the previous day's trade.          Upbeat U.S. jobless claims data initially spurred a rally on  Thursday, suggesting an early end to the Fed's $85 billion a  month in asset purchases and lifting yields on U.S. Treasuries.  But then disappointing data on industrial output and  manufacturing set the stage for the dollar's reversal.         "This is a tough market for speculators. It's big on  volatility, but no clear trends," said Masashi Murata, senior  currency strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman in Tokyo.      "The market seems to have priced in tapering this September,  and that's why U.S. Treasury yields went up to around 2.8  percent, so that should be supporting the dollar/yen," he said.       The dollar rose 0.2 percent on the day to 97.57 yen,  moving back toward Thursday's high of 98.64 yen, which was its  highest since Aug. 5. Support lies just above 97.00 yen, helping  the U.S. unit stay above its seven-week low of 95.810 hit last  week.         The dollar index added 0.1 percent to 81.237, after  Thursday's volatile trade pushed it from a peak of 81.943 - its  highest since Aug. 6 - to a low of 81.098.      Concerns about a recent outflow from U.S. debt added to  pressure on the dollar. The latest Treasury International  Capital (TIC) data showed foreign investors sold long-term U.S.  securities for a fifth straight month in June, undermined by  U.S. Treasury outflows that were the largest on record.         "Since we know that USD saw a temporary swoon in June but  ultimately ended roughly unchanged on a trade-weighted basis, it  is clear that the TIC data is not telling the full story for  FX," said Citigroup strategist Todd Elmer in a note to clients.      "We remain USD bulls for the time being, but the TIC raises  further questions about the sustainability of the uptrend in the  medium- to long-term," Elmer said.      China and Japan accounted for almost all of the record $40.8  billion of net foreign selling of Treasuries in June.           More recent data shows that Japanese investors turned to net  buying of foreign debt, much of which was likely  Treasuries.       The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note   edged up to 2.78 percent in Asia on Friday from its U.S. close  of 2.76 percent on Thursday, when it hit a two-year high of  2.823 percent.          The euro edged down slightly to $1.3340. The single  currency also saw volatile trade on Thursday, falling to a  two-week low of $1.3205 before rising as high as $1.3363.      "There was no rhyme or reason to the (dollar's) move," said  one trader at an Australian bank in Sydney, referring to  Thursday's choppy trade. "It looks like gold went first, and  then the dollar cratered. Whether that was linked is hard to  say."      The trading range was so wide that stop-loss orders were  filled on both the upper and lower ends of the day's range, he  added.           Gold slipped on Friday after first touching a fresh  two-month high, and was last at $1,363.90. It surged more  than 2 percent in the previous session, and the break of major  resistance at $1,350 may have triggered selling in the dollar,  the dealer in Sydney said.      New Zealand's dollar skidded after a strong earthquake  struck near the country's capital of Wellington on Friday. This  led investors to temper expectations on the speed and scale of  any future rate hikes, though there were no immediate reports of  damage.       The kiwi currency dropped as low as $0.8053, from a  two-month peak of $0.8113 minutes before the quake hit. It later  recovered to buy $0.8066.      News of the temblor sent neighbouring Australia's currency  higher to $0.9177, from a low of $0.9122. It was last  up 0.1 percent at $0.9145.  
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