Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX -Dollar rebounds, seen as safest haven as Syria attack looms

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX -Dollar rebounds, seen as safest haven as Syria attack looms
Aug 28th 2013, 08:34

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Wed Aug 28, 2013 4:34am EDT

  * Dollar recovers against yen amid Syria tensions      * Dollar to likely take on dominant safe-haven role      * Yen falls as BOJ's Iwata says bank will continue QE      * BoE's Carney speech main focus for sterling        By Anooja Debnath      LONDON, Aug 28 (Reuters) - The dollar bounced back from a  two-week low against the yen and climbed versus the Swiss franc  on Wednesday as traders took the view that it is the safest  currency of all as military action against Syria looms.       Strategists added that the yen slipped after Bank of Japan  Deputy Governor Kikuo Iwata said the bank will continue its  quantitative easing until inflation stabilises at 2 percent.         The dollar was up 0.5 percent at 97.47 yen,  recovering smartly from an intra-day trough of 96.81 yen which  was its lowest since Aug. 12. It was also up 0.2 percent against  the Swiss franc at 0.9190 francs.      The United States and its allies appear to be gearing up for  a military strike against Syria, perhaps within days, as  punishment for last week's chemical weapons attacks blamed on  President Bashar al-Assad's government.       "The yen and Swiss franc have been supported on safe-haven  demand given the developments in Syria, but I think we are now  increasingly going to see the dollar taking on the dominant role  among the safe-haven currencies and gaining broadly, even  against the yen and the Swiss franc," said Ian Stannard, head of  European FX strategy at Morgan Stanley.      On Tuesday, the dollar had tumbled about 1.5 percent, its  biggest one-day drop versus the Japanese currency since June 11.  Reported options expiries at 97.00 yen and 97.70 yen could keep  the pair close to those levels.       Stannard said a move above 98.15 yen would be a bullish  signal, while analysts said that any further dips in the pair  would be limited and that the dollar may settle into a range of  roughly 96 yen to 99 yen.      "There will probably be some yen-selling by Japanese players  if the dollar were to fall below 95 yen," said Daisuke Karakama  at Mizuho Bank in Tokyo, adding that Japanese institutional  investors might buy the dollar if it falls to such levels.       The euro was up 0.4 percent versus the yen at about 130.42  yen. Against the dollar, the single currency was down  0.1 percent at $1.3376.      As investors avoided risk, growth-linked currencies like the  Australian and New Zealand struggled.       The Aussie was down 0.6 percent at $0.8925 while against the  yen it was down 0.1 percent at 87.00 yen after losing  2 percent on Tuesday. A drop below the Aug. 7 low of 86.36 yen  would take the Australian unit to its lowest since December.      The New Zealand dollar was down 0.6 percent at $0.7754.      The dollar also benefited from the rout in emerging markets  which have been on shaky ground due to an outflow of hot money  as investors position for the U.S. Federal Reserve to begin  scaling down its bond-buying stimulus next month.      Markets will focus on Bank of England Governor Mark Carney's  speech later today where he is expected to reiterate his dovish  stance in an attempt to rein in rising market interest rates,  which will weigh on sterling.  
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