The
Dollar Index rose for a second day before U.S. data tomorrow on first-quarter
growth amid speculation the Federal Reserve will cut monetary stimulus.
The
greenback held an advance versus the euro after Treasury yields (USGG10YR)
climbed to a one-year high. The Australian dollar fell to the weakest level
since October 2011 versus its U.S. counterpart. The yen rose as Japanese stocks
pared gains.
“The
dollar is strong,” said Marito Ueda, the senior managing director at FX Prime
Corp. (8711), a currency-margin company in Tokyo. “The U.S. economy is steadily
recovering, and a reduction in monetary easing appears to be coming into view.”
The
Dollar Index, which Intercontinental Exchange Inc. uses to track the greenback
against currencies of six major U.S. trading partners, added 0.2 percent to
84.246 at 9:51 a.m. in Tokyo. It reached 84.498 on May 23, the most since July
2010.
The
dollar was little changed at $1.2855 per euro after rising 0.6 percent
yesterday. The yen strengthened 0.2 percent to 131.38 per euro and rose 0.2
percent to 102.21 per dollar. The Aussie dollar fell 0.5 percent to 95.69 U.S.
cents, after dropping to 95.56, the weakest since Oct. 5, 2011.
The
Topix (TPX) index of Japanese shares pared its advance to 1 percent from 2.1
percent.
Yields
on 10-year Treasury notes jumped as much as 17 basis points yesterday to 2.18
percent, a level unseen since April 5, 2012. They fell one basis point to 2.15
percent today.
The
U.S. Commerce Department is likely to say tomorrow the world’s biggest economy
grew at an annualized 2.5 percent pace in the first quarter, according to the
median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. It would be unchanged
from the preliminary reading released last month.
(Source: Bloomberg)
now...gold is going down
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