Major currencies tread water as all eyes turn to ECB
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[December 07, 2016]
By Jemima Kelly
LONDON (Reuters) - Most major currencies treaded water on Wednesday with
traders looking ahead to a meeting of the European Central Bank on
Thursday that could set the tone for markets after the sharp moves in
the wake of last month's U.S. elections.
The ECB is widely expected to announce an extension to its quantitative
easing program, but uncertainty reigns over whether the size of the
monthly asset purchases will be kept steady or scaled back, and over
whether a formal signal on the eventual end of the asset-purchase
program will be sent.
If the ECB does say it will start to reduce its asset purchases -
so-called tapering - the euro would probably rebound following a 4
percent fall against the dollar <EUR=> over the past month, analysts
said.
On Wednesday the European single currency edged up 0.2 percent to
$1.0734. It had slumped on Monday to $1.0505, its lowest since March
2015, in a knee-jerk reaction after Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi
lost a referendum on constitutional reform and said he would resign.
But the euro quickly jumped back to a 3-week high of $1.0797 on the same
day as a worst-case political scenario for Rome appeared to have been
averted for the time being, and as investors turned their attention to
the ECB.
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"People had gone into the referendum with a very pessimistic view and I
think the last five years have taught us that, as far as the euro is
concerned, political issues often don't have a lasting impact," DZ Bank
currency analyst Sonja Marten said in Frankfurt.
The dollar was flat at 114.03 yen <JPY=>, not far off the peak of 114.83
hit last week, its highest against the Japanese currency since early
February. The greenback has surged over 10 percent against the yen in
the past month.
Bank of Japan Deputy Governor Kikuo Iwata said on Wednesday that the
central bank had not shifted its focus away from the pace of money
printing and stressed it remained committed to using both rate cuts and
asset purchases as key tools to revive the economy.
"The Fed is hiking rates, the ECB might extend the duration of its
program..., but the next big thing is going to be tapering," said
Marten. "There's a general move away from adding onto expansionary
measures. So the central banks that continue to signal that they are
willing to do that stand out."
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Arrangement of various world currencies including Chinese Yuan, US
Dollar, Euro, British Pound, shot January 25, 2011. REUTERS/Kacper
Pempel/Illustration/File Photo
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"FISCAL LARGESSE"
Against a basket of currencies, the dollar edged down 0.1 percent to
100.44, having poked above 102.00 to a 13-1/2-year high in late November
as U.S. Treasury yields soared on prospects of President-elect Donald
Trump adopting large fiscal spending and reflationary policies.
"While we still think that the dollar could bounce further, especially
in 2017, euro/dollar's short-term direction will ultimately depend on
what the Fed has to say about the future direction of U.S. interest
rates at its meeting next week," said Kathleen Brooks, research director
at City Index.
"If the Fed believes that President-elect Trump’s fiscal largesse
warrants a faster pace of rate increases than is currently being priced
in, then the market will rush to price in higher yields, which will
boost the dollar and weigh on currencies like the euro."
The biggest mover among major currencies was sterling, which fell as
much as 0.8 percent to hit a one-week low of 85.255 pence against the
euro <EURGBP=D4>. It also slid half a percent against the dollar <GBP=D4>
after data showed British industrial output suffered its biggest monthly
fall in more than four years.
The Canadian dollar was flat ahead of a Bank of Canada policy meeting
that is expected to see interest rates left unchanged .
(Additional reporting by Shinichi Saoshiro in Tokyo; Editing by
Mark Heinrich)
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