Friday, August 16, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Dollar climbs as U.S. 10-yr yields hold near 2-year high

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Dollar climbs as U.S. 10-yr yields hold near 2-year high
Aug 16th 2013, 10:56

Fri Aug 16, 2013 6:56am EDT

  * Dollar supported by rise in U.S. yields      * Expectations of Fed tapering lead to dollar bids      * ECB's monetary policy seen remaining accommodative        By Anirban Nag      LONDON, Aug 16 (Reuters) - The dollar edged up against a  basket of currencies on Friday, drawing support from a rise in  U.S. Treasury yields on expectations that the Federal Reserve  may start withdrawing stimulus next month.       Ten-year Treasury yields traded near two year  peaks, while the gap between two-year Treasury yields   and their Japanese counterpart rose to its highest in  six weeks, Reuters data showed.      The dollar index rose 0.1 percent to 81.25, helped  mainly by gains against the euro. The euro was slightly lower on  the day at $1.3340, while against the yen, the dollar was  flat on the day at 97.40.       Part of the reason for yen bids was because of a drop in  global stock markets which underpinned demand for the safe-haven  currency, traders said. Still, with the Fed set to become the  first major central bank to start withdrawing stimulus, the  dollar is likely to trade with a firm bias, analysts said.       "Given that the 10-year U.S. yields are headed towards 3  percent we think the general direction is for a stronger  dollar," said Tom Levinson, FX strategist at ING. "The dollar  index has underperformed the rise in yields so there is a fair  bit of catch-up to do."       The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note   edged up to 2.78 percent in the European session from its U.S.  close of 2.76 percent on Thursday, when it hit a two-year high  of 2.823 percent.            U.S. DATA       Later in the session, U.S housing starts for July and the  University of Michigan confidence index could set the tone for  bonds and to a large extent the dollar, traders said.       "With US bond yields rising, we think the chance of  dollar/yen breaking higher has increased," Morgan Stanley  analysts said in a note. They added that with Japanese investors  showing an increasing preference for foreign assets, the yen is  likely to come under pressure, especially against the dollar.      Recent data has shown Japanese investors turned to net  buying of foreign debt, much of which was likely to have been  Treasuries.       The Bank of Japan embarked on a massive quantitative easing  programme in April and with more fiscal and structural reforms  likely to be put in place in coming months, more Japanese  investors are looking overseas for higher yields.      And even though the euro zone has emerged from a recession,  the European Central Bank looks unlikely to change its  accommodative policy stance any time soon. In the United States,  though, good domestic data has bolstered expectations that  monetary policy may not remain ultra-loose for long.       "We remain constructive of the dollar and expect Fed to  start tapering in the near term," said Kenneth Dickson,  investment director at Standard Life Investments, which has $271  billion of assets under management.  
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