Philippine Daily Inquirer

Dollar down to 1-month low vs yen

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LONDON—The dollar fell across the board on Tuesday, falling a full yen to a one-month low against the Japanese currency and down against the commodity-linked currencies most associated with growth and greater risk-taking by investors worldwide.

The greenback has been under pressure for the past week as the perceived chances of a rise in US interest rates this year took a knock from several batches of data and the tone of some Federal Reserve policymake­rs.

The trigger for its weakness overnight was a paper from San Francisco Fed President John Williams arguing that central banks might have to raise inflation targets, focus more on growth and back much looser fiscal policy in future.

To market ears, that all added up to a strong argument for keeping the Fed’s rates unchanged for the foreseeabl­e future and the dollar fell 1 percent against yen and around half a percent against the euro as Asian and European markets came back online.

“The Williams paper yesterday was pretty dovish, so people are selling dollars. Dollar yields are lower pretty much across the curve since the release,” said Citi strategist Josh O’Byrne.

Speculatio­n of further aggressive monetary easing by Tokyo that would weaken the yen was quelled by last month’s Bank of Japan meeting, and speculatio­n on the chances of the government launching direct interventi­on in the FXmarket has also eased.

“There is this feeling that Japan may not have that much left up their sleeve and the Fed does seem to be backing off,” said O’Byrne.

“The Japanese have been surprising­ly quiet and people in general are talking about (interventi­on) a lot less. Verbal interventi­on really stepped up when we were seeing fast moves in the yen, and this has been more of a grind, so it’s harder for them to argue that there have been disruptive markets.”

The dollar traded as low as 100.15 yen, its lowest since the aftermath of Britain’s vote in June to leave the European Union.

It weakened to a 7-week low of $1.1258 per euro, and by 0.5 and 0.7 percent respective­ly against the Australian and New Zealand dollars.

Against a basket of six major currencies, it lost 0.6 percent to 95.051.

“The dollar is being weighed on by the limited appetite for Fed trades, and this strength in emerging markets and the commoditie­s currencies,” said Stephen Gallo, a strategist with Canada’s BMO in London.

The markets will look to U.S. data later in the day including consumer prices, housing starts and industrial output for another chance to gauge the health of the economy.

The dollar will probably fall further against the yen over the next few months, with the yen supported by factors such as Japan’s rising current account surplus, said Heng Koon How, senior FX investment strategist for Credit Suisse.

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