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						Dollar breaks 4-day losing streak on trade tensions
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		 [October 07, 2019]  By 
		Sujata Rao 
 LONDON (Reuters) - The dollar firmed on 
		Monday, breaking a four-day losing streak, as fresh concerns over the 
		trade war between the United States and China kept risk appetite subdued 
		and trade-oriented currencies such as the Australian dollar under 
		pressure.
 
 A Bloomberg report that Chinese officials were reluctant to agree to 
		U.S. President Donald Trump's broad trade deal cast a pall over 
		investors, after weak U.S. economic data last week raised concerns about 
		the economic outlook.
 
 "The trade news has boosted safe-haven demand for the dollar and hit the 
		high-beta currencies such as the Aussie and the Swedish crown," said 
		Kamal Sharma, a London-based director of G10 FX strategy at Bank of 
		America Merrill Lynch.
 
 The dollar, which tends to benefit when trade tensions flare up, rose 
		further off one-month lows hit last week when a string of poor data 
		suggested the conflict was inflicting a bigger toll on the world's 
		biggest economy.
 
		
		 
		
 The greenback firmed 0.15% against a basket of currencies to 98.90, 
		after weakening around 1% last week. It rose by more than 0.5% versus 
		the Swedish crown and the Norwegian currency <NOK=>.
 
 "Markets have a bit of a risk-off tone today, and risk-off is generally 
		dollar positive," Stephen Gallo, head of FX at BMO Capital Markets, 
		said, though he noted the dollar faced short-term headwinds.
 
 Hedge funds have added to their massive long dollar positions, which 
		rose in the latest week to a nine-week high, according to Reuters 
		calculations and Commodity Futures Trading Commission data released on 
		Friday..
 
 (GRAPHIC: Speculators raise dollar positions -
		
		https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
 gfx/mkt/12/6977/6908/positioning.png)
 
 The euro remains out of favor, the data showed, with bearish bets on the 
		currency climbing sharply.
 
		
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			 South Korean won, 
			Chinese yuan and Japanese yen notes are seen on U.S. 100 dollar 
			notes in this picture illustration taken in Seoul, South Korea, 
			December 15, 2015. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji/File Photo 
             
The latest data appeared to justify the pessimism, with German industrial orders 
falling more than expected in August on weaker domestic demand - clear evidence 
that a manufacturing slump is pushing Europe's largest economy into recession.
 The euro traded as low as $1.0964 <EUR=EBS> but held off 2-1/2-year lows of 
$1.0879 hit last Tuesday.
 
 The Chinese yuan <CNH=> fell 0.3% to 7.13 per dollar in offshore trade. There 
was no onshore trading as China is still on a break for its national day. Gallo 
said the clouds over the dollar offered some support to the yuan.
 
 "If things break down this week, I don't think you will see dollar/yuan above 
7.20 on that headline," he added.
 
 Other trade-exposed currencies such as the Australian dollar <AUD=D3> and the 
Korean won <KRW=> also fell, with the former losing a quarter percent and the 
won down 0.4%.
 
 Sterling slipped 0.2% to around $1.23 <GBP=D3>, with only a few weeks until the 
UK's scheduled exit from the European Union on Oct. 31.
 
 (Reporting by Sujata Rao; additional reporting by Saikat Chatterjee; Editing by 
Kim Coghill and Jan Harvey)
 
				 
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