| The U.S. dollar weakened to levels near last week's two-year low versus the euro |
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01:09 2007/04/11 |
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The U.S. dollar weakened to levels near last week's two-year low versus the euro this morning, reversing gains sparked by a robust U.S. jobs report. As European traders returned from the long Easter weekend, America??™s currency was driven lower across the board, with some taking cues from rising U.S.-China trade tensions and caution ahead of this weekend's meeting of Group of Seven finance chiefs. US-China trade tensions have sparked in the last few days, after Washington said it would take legal action against China for failing to stop widespread piracy and counterfeiting of American goods. China denounced the decision on Tuesday, saying the action would seriously damage the two countries' established cooperation. The U.S. currency also weakened against high-yielding currencies, hitting a 16-year low versus the Australian dollar and two-year troughs against the New Zealand dollar as the carry-trade phenomena dominated the currency pairs. Markets now await tomorrow??™s release of minutes from the most recent Federal Reserve monetary policy meeting for clues on the near-term outlook on US interest rates. The British pound hit a three-week low against a broadly stronger euro - but rose against the US dollar - , pressured by residual disappointment in the market that the Bank of England (BoE) did not raise interest rates last week. The pound rose versus a broadly weaker US dollar as concerns about brewing tensions between the United States and China over trade and nervousness before this weekend??™s Group of Seven meeting outweighed a stronger than expected U.S. jobs report on Friday. The BoE held rates at 5.25 percent last week, disappointing a significant minority of investors who had bet on an increase and sparking a sell-off in the pound. The currency??™s losses have been capped by expectations that the BoE will raise rates soon, probably in May, and by the fact that even at current levels British rates are higher than those of many other developed countries. The Canadian dollar extended its recent three-month high against the U.S. dollar on Tuesday as America??™s currency gave back its earlier data-driven gains. With oil prices steady and the Canadian data calendar empty, the Canadian dollar took its cues from its U.S. counterpart, rising to its highest level since December as the U.S. unit gave up gains from last week's strong U.S. jobs data. Oil prices were steady, but have declined over the past week as geopolitical tensions have eased following the release of 15 British sailors and marines held by Iran. Markets expect further gains for the Canadian currency, as domestic economic signals and strong U.S. data is expected to continue, which is positive for Canada due to the close trade ties between the two countries. No Canadian data is due during the session, but the market will be looking ahead to March housing data due on Wednesday. Indicative Rates: |
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