Dollar slips to two-week
low vs. yen as Treasury yields fall
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[December 29, 2016]
By Jemima Kelly
LONDON
(Reuters) - The dollar slipped to a two-week low against the yen on
Thursday, mirroring a fall in U.S. bond yields as weaker-than-expected
economic data weighed on the greenback and waning risk appetite boosted
Japan's safe-haven currency.
Japan's Nikkei stock index - which tends to move in the opposite
direction to the yen - shed 1.3 percent as Toshiba Corp dived 16 percent
after news of potential massive writedowns led to a downgrade of its
credit ratings. The dollar dipped 0.8 percent to 116.30 yen.
Against a basket of major currencies, the greenback fell 0.6 percent to
a one-week low, extending falls late on Wednesday after data showed
contracts to buy previously owned U.S. homes falling to their lowest
level in nearly a year.
Yields on 10-year U.S. Treasury yields - which have in recent months
been closely correlated with the dollar/yen exchange rate - also fell to
their lowest in two weeks, having soared to a more-than-two-year high
above 2.6 percent earlier in the month.
"We had a huge sell-off in the U.S. bond market since the U.S.
election...so perhaps we’ve seen the crescendo of selling, at least
initially," said MUFG currency economist Lee Hardman, in London.
"If that's the case and U.S. yields stabilize or come back lower in the
near term, there's some scope there for dollar/yen to drift lower in the
near term as well.
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Light is cast on a U.S. one-hundred dollar bill next to a Japanese
10,000 yen note in this picture illustration shot February 28, 2013.
REUTERS/Shohei Miyano/Illustration/File Photo
Hardman added that the break below 117 yen, which had provided a floor
during the Christmas period in which volumes have been thin, had
accelerated the move lower.
Sterling climbed back up from two-month lows to $1.2270 <GBP=D4>, but
was on track for a more than 16 percent fall against the greenback in
2016 – its worst showing since 2008.
The euro was also given breathing space as the dollar weakened across
the board. The common currency climbed half a percent to $1.0450
after falling to as low as $1.0372 the previous day.
"The dollar looks like it has run its course against the yen for now.
But against the euro, the dollar still has room to gain as the pair is
now trying to catch up to the widening between U.S. and German yields,"
said Masafumi Yamamoto, chief forex strategist at Mizuho Securities in
Tokyo.
The spread between the 10-year U.S. Treasury and German bund yields is
the widest on record stretching back to 1990.
(Additional reporting by Shinichi Saoshiro in Tokyo; Editing by Elaine
Hardcastle)
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