Saturday, August 31, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Dollar rises to 4-week high as Syria spurs demand for safety

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Dollar rises to 4-week high as Syria spurs demand for safety
Aug 30th 2013, 20:19

Fri Aug 30, 2013 4:19pm EDT

  * Syria conflict continues to haunt market      * U.N. investigators finish gathering samples in Syria      * U.S. makes case for limited military action      * Weak U.S. consumer spending muddles Fed outlook      * Speculators raise bets in favor of the dollar          By Julie Haviv      NEW YORK, Aug 30 (Reuters) - The U.S. dollar rose to a  four-week high against a basket of major currencies on Friday,  ending the month with its strongest   gain since May, as the  possibility of a U.S. military strike on Syria had investors  shunning risk.       The United States made clear on Friday that it would punish  Syrian President Bashar al-Assad for the "brutal and flagrant"  chemical weapons attack that it says killed more than 1,400  people in Damascus last week.       U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry made a broad case for  limited U.S. military action against Syria for its alleged use  of chemical weapons, saying it could not go unpunished for such  a "crime against humanity."       "Today's combination of risk aversion (on Syria) and  expectations of Fed tapering next month suggest we will have  continued dollar strength next week," said Camilla Sutton, chief  currency strategist at Scotiabank in Toronto.      "Next week should be quiet leading up to Friday's nonfarm  payrolls report, but the technicals and fundamentals suggest we  have entered a new period of U.S. dollar strength," she said.       Worries about a Syrian conflict pushed the dollar index,  which tracks the greenback against a basket of six major  currencies, to a four-week high of 82.263.      The dollar index, which last traded up 0.2 percent at 82.078  , was also buoyed by weakness in the euro, the largest  component of the index, which fell on soft data out of the  region.       A team of U.N. investigators has finished gathering samples  and evidence in Syria related to a suspected chemical weapons  attack that killed hundreds of people in suburbs near Damascus  last week and is packing up to leave, a U.N. spokesman said on  Friday.       A U.S. intelligence report disclosed that there was "high  confidence" that Syrian forces had used chemical weapons  multiple times in the last year, including the Aug. 21 attack  outside Damascus.       The dollar index was up 0.9 percent on the week, its third  straight weekly gain. After falling for two straight months, the  dollar index gained 0.8 percent in August, its best gain since  May.      Currency speculators, meanwhile, increased their bets in  favor of the U.S. dollar in the latest week, according to data  from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission released on  Friday, snapping five straight weeks of declines.         The value of the dollar's net long position rose to $15.82  billion in the week ended Aug. 27 from $13.54 billion the  previous week.      Looking ahead, next Friday's nonfarm payrolls report should  be the highlight of the week since the state of the jobs market  is key to Federal Reserve policy. A strong number should affirm  expectations that the Fed will pull back on its monetary  stimulus when it meets later in the month.       U.S. financial markets will be closed on Monday in  observance of the U.S. Labor Day holiday.      Friday's U.S. data were soft, save for the manufacturing  index for the Midwest, which saw the index for prices paid, an  inflation signal, rise to its highest since November.         But the 0.1 percent increase in both personal income and  consumption was lower than expected for the month of July. many  market participants, however, believe those numbers won't  prevent the Federal Reserve from paring back its stimulus next  month, even if the reduction is at a smaller scale.      The euro was down 0.2 percent at $1.3214 after  earlier touching a five-week low of $1.3172. The currency  slipped from highs after data showed benign inflation and  elevated unemployment at 12.1 percent.       Investors will be wary of buying the euro before next week's  European Central Bank interest rate meeting, where policymakers  are likely to reiterate their pledge that rates will be low for  some time as economic recovery sets in slowly.      "Euro zone unemployment shows that the real economy is in  dire straits and underlines that the ECB must keep monetary  policy super-accommodative for years to come," said David Brown,  economist at New View Economics.      The dollar fell 0.2 percent to 98.14 yen, according  to Reuters data.  
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