Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Forex: Greenback falls below 91.00 against the Yen

Tue, Sep 15 2009, 17:22 GMT
http://www.fxstreet.com

FXstreet.com (Córdoba) – The rise in U.S. markets boosted the Yen against the Dollar in the last hours. USD/JPY fell below 91.00 to 90.80, only two pips above intra-day low at 90.78. In case the pair breaks below the next support lies at 90.60. Current price at 90.92/94 is 0.05% above today’s opening price. On the upside resistance is located at 91.55 (intra-day high) and above at 91.90 and 92.10.

The FastBrokers Research Team afirms: “Despite the USD/JPY’s negative tendency, the currency pair seems to be running out of room to the downside since it has historical trading ranges nearby dating back to December 2008 and January 2009 lows. Meanwhile, investors continue to act off of the belief that the DPJ will enact economic policies supportive of a stronger Yen. However, it remains to be seen whether the BoJ will alter its monetary policy approach in any dramatic way.”

USD/JPY (Sep 16 at 05:31 GMT)

90.99/03 (-0.01%)

H 91.17 L 90.76

S3S2S1R1R2R3
90.500290.727690.955091.065091.292791.5203
[?]Trend Index[?]OB/OS Index
Slightly BullishNeutral
Data updated on Sep 16 at 05:15 (15-minute timeframe)

Forex: EUR/USD trades above 1.4600 after bouncing at 1.4560

Tue, Sep 15 2009, 16:42 GMT
http://www.fxstreet.com

FXstreet.com (Barcelona) – The Euro is trading back above 1.4600 level against the Greenback after falling 65 pips from 1.4626 to post intra-day low at 1.4560 in the minutes following the better than expected US retail sales report. During the American session, euro has recovered almost all of its previous losses and pair has risen to trade above 1.4600.

Currently the pair is trading around 1.4605/15, 0.10% below today's opening price action at 1.6578.

According to Mohammed Isah, technical analyst at FXTechtrade, current downtrend is a corrective one and the Euro will resume uptrend: "Its overall trend remains higher suggesting that the mentioned price action remains corrective of its MT uptrend. In such a case, its minor support printed Monday at 1.4514 will come in as initial support ahead of its stronger support residing at the 1.4446 level, its Aug 09 high where a reversal of roles is expected to turn EUR higher again."

EUR/USD (Sep 16 at 05:31 GMT)

1.4678/79 (0.10%)

H 1.4685 L 1.4655

S3S2S1R1R2R3
1.45991.46361.46721.46861.47231.4760
[?]Trend Index[?]OB/OS Index
Strongly BullishNeutral
Data updated on Sep 16 at 05:15 (15-minute timeframe)

[ View EUR/USD technical studies ]

CURRENCIES: Dollar Gains After Retail Sales, Price Data

Tue, Sep 15 2009, 15:54 GMT
http://www.djnewswires.com/eu

CURRENCIES: Dollar Gains After Retail Sales, Price Data

By Deborah Levine

The dollar gained versus major counterparts Tuesday, after a pair of economic reports said retail sales and producer prices rose more than economists expected, encouraging speculation that the economy is reviving.

The dollar index (DXY), a measure of the U.S. unit against a basket of rival currencies, traded at 76.822, up from 76.727 in New York trade Monday afternoon.

The dollar rose to 91.18 Japanese yen, up from 91.02 yen late Monday.

Retail sales rose 2.7%, in large part stemming from the so-called "cash-for-clunkers" program. Still, excluding automobiles, sales increased 1.1%.

A separate report showed wholesale prices rose 1.7% last month. Excluding food and energy, prices increased 0.2%, also more than expected.

A third report from the New York Federal Reserve Bank said its Empire State Manufacturing index rose to 18.9 in September from 12.1 in August.

"This morning's economic reports were overwhelmingly positive for the U.S. dollar with fundamentals overshadowing risk appetite," said Kathy Lien, director of currency research at Global Forex Trading.

For months, the greenback has tended to move in the opposite direction as equities as investors' willingness to buy riskier assets fluctuates. That trend has shown signs of diminishing in the past month or so, and resuming its more traditional correlation to economic data.

"The feel good effect of today's numbers provided players with an excuse to trim back on short U.S. dollar positions with the greenback clearly in oversold territory," said Michael Woolfolk, senior currency strategist at Bank of New York Mellon.

The dollar stayed up after another report said business inventories declined 1% in July, roughly in line with expectations.

The euro traded at $1.4604, from $1.4614 versus the dollar on Monday.

The single currency was under more pressure in the overnight session after a gauge of German investor confidence posted a weaker-than-expected rise in September, but then trimmed losses.

The Mannheim-based Center for European Economic Research, or ZEW, said its economic expectations index rose to 57.7 in September, up from 56.1 in August. Economists had forecast a rise to 59.5.

British pound

The British pound was the big mover on currency markets, dropping versus the greenback and falling to a three-month low versus the European single currency after Bank of England Governor Mervyn King said the Monetary Policy Committee was considering a cut in the deposit rate paid on some reserves held by commercial banks at the BOE.

Such a move would penalize banks for holding reserves above a certain level at the central bank, spurring them to buy bonds and other assets. That would effectively expand the central bank's quantitative-easing program, analysts said.

The pound fell 0.9% versus the U.S. dollar to $1.6431. The euro moved to its highest level against sterling since June, and changed hands in recent action at 88.92 pence.

Click here to go to Dow Jones NewsPlus, a web front page of today's most important business and market news, analysis and commentary: http://www.djnewsplus.com/access/al?rnd=TGHFz2YpriWEC26XTTeOsA%3D%3D. You can use this link on the day this article is published and the following day.

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

September 15, 2009 11:54 ET (15:54 GMT)


Forex: GBP/USD extends decline to 1.6400 as fresh 1-week low

FXstreet.com (Barcelona) – The Sterling has continued with its today's drop against the Greenback on the back of the King's morning comments and the better than expected US today's data. GBP/USD has fallen 260 pips since the early European session from intraday high at 1.6660 to test 1.6400 and trade at 1-week low levels.

Currently the pair is trading around 1.6520/30, 0.90% below today's opening price action at 1.6578.

Valeria Bednarik, FXstreet.com collaborator, comments: “Strong fall in Gbp, halted around static support zone around 1.6440, suggest some upside correction before another attempt to break lower, as hourly indicators reached oversold conditions. Bigger time frames turned bearish yet 200 EMA in 4 hours charts, around mentioned 1.6440 is capping the downside. We need to see the pair clearly under to call for further downside movements here.”

Bednarik provides us with her levels: “Support levels: 1.6440 1.6400 1.6370. Resistance levels: 1.6480 1.6520 1.6550.”

GBP/USD (Sep 16 at 05:32 GMT)

1.6457/62 (-0.17%)

H 1.6513 L 1.6449

S3S2S1R1R2R3
1.63741.64151.64561.64701.65111.6552
[?]Trend Index[?]OB/OS Index
NeutralNeutral
Data updated on Sep 16 at 05:15 (15-minute timeframe)

[ View GBP/USD technical studies ]

WORLD FOREX: Dollar Remains Higher On Encouraging US Data

WORLD FOREX: Dollar Remains Higher On Encouraging US Data

By Bradley Davis
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES


NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--The dollar remains stronger against the euro and yen late morning Tuesday after better-than-expected U.S. economic data gave the U.S. currency at least a temporary lift from its post-summer slide.

Whether the dollar can sustain its burst of strength is uncertain, analysts said. In choppy trading, the U.S. currency has already given back some of its post-data gains to the yen and euro.

The latest report on retail sales, which analysts had said are key to a U.S. economic recovery, came in better than expected, with a 2.7% increase, boosted by the government's "Cash for Clunkers" car-buying program. The U.S. Producer Price Index rose 1.7% in August, higher than the 1% analysts had expected.

In addition, the New York Fed's Empire State business-conditions index climbed to 18.88 in September, its highest level since late 2008.

The three reports painted a more encouraging picture of the U.S. economy than investors have been accustomed to seeing.

That the dollar gained on positive U.S. data could be a sign that the dollar sell-off has hit a floor, said Brian Dolan, chief currency strategist at Forex.com in New Jersey.

Late Tuesday morning in New York, the euro was at $1.4596 from $1.4612 late Monday, according to EBS via CQG. The dollar was at Y91.29 from Y91.00. The euro was at Y133.25 from Y132.98. The U.K. pound was at $1.6440 from $1.6562, while the dollar was at CHF1.0387 from CHF1.0355.

The euro had been on a tear against the dollar since the U.S. Labor Day holiday last week, when risk appetite flooded back into the market. The euro hit a nine-month high against the dollar on Monday.

The common currency slipped below $1.4561 in morning trading as investors repositioned after the U.S. data and consolidated after the euro's recent rally.

Still, traders said they expected the euro to remain within its new range.

"We believe the euro extended itself last week, and I think we're just consolidating in these ranges," said Greg Salvaggio, vice president of capital markets at Tempus Consulting in Washington.

The euro within the next few days should trade in a range from $1.4450 to $1.4650, said Sacha Tihanyi, a currency strategist with Scotia Capital in Toronto.

Even if the dollar is given temporary boosts by improving U.S. economic data, the euro is likely to strengthen to $1.50 by the end of the year, based on concerns over U.S. fiscal health, including mounting deficit spending, Tihanyi said.

A significant decline in the dollar had been called a threat to U.S. financial stability in comments Monday from San Francisco Federal Reserve President Janet Yellen. She added that the Fed doesn't have control over the currency, but takes the dollar's movements into consideration when setting monetary policy.

Meanwhile, the pound fell sharply overnight - and continues to fall - after Bank of England Governor Mervyn King said cutting the rates that the BOE pays on deposits could be a "useful supplement" to monetary policy.

The pound sank swiftly from $1.66 to the $1.6525 area, a six-day low against the dollar, immediately after King made the comments in a testimony to a parliamentary committee. It later kept on falling.

Similarly, the euro shot up from GBP0.8786 to GBP0.8828, marking a three-month high against the pound.

"The fact that he made comments around the scope for a rate cut is not supportive for the currency. Given that sterling has performed quite well of late, this is a reality check," said Phyllis Papadavid, a currencies analyst at Societe Generale in London.

-By Bradley Davis, Dow Jones Newswires; 212-416-2654; bradley.davis@dowjones.com

(Katie Martin in London, Cassandra Sweet in San Francisco, Paul Evans in Toronto and Riva Froymovich in New York contributed to this article.)

Click here to go to Dow Jones NewsPlus, a web front page of today's most important business and market news, analysis and commentary: http://www.djnewsplus.com/access/al?rnd=TGHFz2YpriWEC26XTTeOsA%3D%3D. You can use this link on the day this article is published and the following day.

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

September 15, 2009 11:26 ET (15:26 GMT)

U.S. markets fluctuates to negative territory after a positive opening

FXstreet.com (Barcelona) - U.S. markets have reversed after a slightly positive opening, buoyed by upbeat macroeconomic figures, to go through moderate losses oner hour after opening levels. Currently Wall Street is mixing red and green numbers.

Dow Jones Industrials Index drops 0.1%, while the Nasdaq Index edges up 0.14% but the S&P Index trades 0.15% below its opening level, one hour after the opening.

GBP/USD remains trading very close to intra-day low at 1.6415, as the pair remains several pios below 1.6450, the EUR/USD has bounced at 1.4560 low as the pair tests levels right below 1.4600 and the USD/JPY has ulled down from intra-day high at 91.65 and is testing levels at previous intra-day high 91.25.

EUR/USD (Sep 16 at 05:31 GMT)

1.4678/79 (0.10%)

H 1.4685 L 1.4655

S3S2S1R1R2R3
1.45991.46361.46721.46861.47231.4760
[?]Trend Index[?]OB/OS Index
Strongly BullishNeutral
Data updated on Sep 16 at 05:15 (15-minute timeframe)

[ View EUR/USD technical studies ]
FXstreet.com

CURRENCIES: Dollar Adds To Gain After Retail Sales, Price Data


CURRENCIES: Dollar Adds To Gain After Retail Sales, Price Data

By Deborah Levine

The dollar gained versus major counterparts Tuesday, after a pair of economic reports said retail sales and producer prices rose more than economists expected, encouraging speculation that the economy is reviving.

The dollar index (DXY), a measure of the U.S. unit against a basket of rival currencies, traded at 76.936, up from 76.727 in New York trade Monday afternoon.

The dollar rose to 91.22 Japanese yen, up from 91.02 yen late Monday.

Retail sales rose 2.7%, in large part stemming from the so-called cash-for-clunkers program. Still, excluding automobiles, sales increased 1.1%.

A separate report showed wholesale prices rose 1.7% last month. Excluding food and energy, prices increased 0.2%, also more than expected.

A third report from the New York Federal Reserve Bank said its Empire State Manufacturing index rose to 18.9 in September from 12.1 in August.

"This morning's economic reports were overwhelmingly positive for the U.S. dollar with fundamentals overshadowing risk appetite," said Kathy Lien, director of currency research at Global Forex Trading.

For months, the greenback has tended to move in the opposite direction as equities as investors' willingness to buy riskier assets fluctuates. That trend has shown signs of diminishing in the past month or so, and resuming its more traditional correlation to economic data.

The dollar stayed up after another report said business inventories declined 1% in July, roughly inline with expectations.

The euro traded at $1.4577, from $1.4614 versus the dollar on Monday.

The single currency came under pressure after a gauge of German investor confidence posted a weaker-than-expected rise in September, but then trimmed losses.

The Mannheim-based Center for European Economic Research, or ZEW, said its economic expectations index rose to 57.7 in September, up from 56.1 in August. Economists had forecast a rise to 59.5.

British pound

The British pound was the big mover on currency markets, dropping versus the greenback and falling to a three-month low versus the European single currency after Bank of England Governor Mervyn King said the Monetary Policy Committee was considering a cut in the deposit rate paid on some reserves held by commercial banks at the BOE.

Such a move would penalize banks for holding reserves above a certain level at the central bank, spurring them to buy bonds and other assets. That would effectively expand the central bank's quantitative-easing program, analysts said.

The pound fell 0.9% versus the U.S. dollar to $1.6428. The euro moved to its highest level against sterling since June, and changed hands in recent action at 88.77 pence.

Click here to go to Dow Jones NewsPlus, a web front page of today's most important business and market news, analysis and commentary: http://www.djnewsplus.com/access/al?rnd=TGHFz2YpriWEC26XTTeOsA%3D%3D. You can use this link on the day this article is published and the following day.

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

September 15, 2009 10:22 ET (14:22 GMT)