Dollar retreats from
peaks, euro boosted by Fillon win
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[November 28, 2016]
By Jemima Kelly
LONDON
(Reuters) - The dollar extended its losses on Monday, retreating from
its highest levels since 2003 as U.S. Treasury yields eased from recent
peaks.
The greenback had surged more than 4 percent against a basket of
currencies <.DXY> in the wake of Donald Trump's shock victory in the
U.S. elections, with investors reckoning a Trump administration would
see an expansion of fiscal policy, boosting inflation and pushing up
interest rates.
But after hitting an almost 14-year-high of 102.05 on Thursday, the
dollar dipped on Friday and added to those losses on Monday, with the
index down 0.7 percent at 100.82 by 0820 GMT, tracking 10-year U.S.
Treasury yields lower <US10YT=RR>.
The greenback fell 1.2 percent to 111.865 yen <JPY=>, having soared more
than 8 percent in the wake of Trump's victory to its highest levels in
eight months against the safe-haven Japanese currency.
Most analysts, though, said the dip in the dollar should not be
interpreted as any kind of reassessment of the U.S. outlook, but simply
as a corrective pullback. The greenback is still on track for its
strongest two-monthly gains since early 2015.
"This is probably a mixture of some cooling down after the strong moves
last week, and also we have seen interest rates have come down globally,
and that has weakened the dollar, just as the dollar strengthened with
the rising rates the days before," said UBS currency strategist Daniel
Trum, in Zurich.
The euro climbed as much as 1.1 percent against the greenback <EUR=> to
an 11-day high of $1.0686, benefiting from the dollar's broad weakness
and also boosted by the election of Francois Fillon as the center-right
candidate in next year's French presidential elections.
The reformist former prime minister is now favorite to become president,
with a flash opinion poll showing he would easily beat National Front
leader Marine Le Pen in a run-off second round. Markets worry that the
far-right Le Pen, who has promised a referendum on membership of the
European Union if she wins, would threaten the future of the currency
bloc.
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Four thousand U.S. dollars are counted out by a banker counting
currency at a bank in Westminster, Colorado November 3, 2009.
REUTERS/Rick Wilking/File Photo
"He has been able to achieve quite a clear majority in the primaries so
he's now quite a strong candidate going into the elections next year,"
said Trum.
The dollar could face some resistance this week ahead of potentially
risk-laden events such as the midweek Organization of the Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC) meeting, and Italy's Dec. 4 referendum on
constitutional reform.
Crude oil has slumped amid uncertainty over whether OPEC would reach an
output deal. And Italy's referendum could rattle financial markets by
prompting the country's government to resign.
Currencies will also have Friday's U.S. non-farm payrolls to contend
with.
"Those who have been following the dollar's uptrend since early November
now sit on large profits, so it is not surprising if some lock the gains
in," said Masafumi Yamamoto, chief FX strategist at Mizuho Securities in
Tokyo.
(Additional reporting by Shinichi Saoshiro in Tokyo; Editing by Andrew
Heavens)
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