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The dollar hit a two-month low against the euro and a six-week trough versus the Swiss franc on Friday, sliding for a second day after China's central bank chief said it has a clear plan to diversify its $1 trillion in foreign exchange reserves.
The dollar and other major currencies also took a hit against the yen after Bank of Japan Governor Toshihiko Fukui said he was concerned about a sharp unwinding of carry trades in which investors borrow the low-yielding Japanese currency.
But the dollar pared some of those losses on data showing Japanese machinery orders unexpectedly fell 7.4 percent in September, casting more doubts on a Bank of Japan interest rate increase before year end.
Joseph Kraft, head of FX and interest rates at Morgan Stanley in Tokyo, said Fukui's comments were likely a warning to investors not to get too complacent about holding risky carry trades since the BoJ has said it plans to keep raising rates.
With short-term Japanese rates at just 0.25 percent, a variety of investors have borrowed in yen and used the money to purchase higher-yielding currencies in the carry trade. Such trades helped to push the euro to an all-time high against the yen on Thursday and the pound to an eight-year peak.
The US currency tumbled across the board on Thursday after comments from China's central bank governor, Zhou Xiaochuan, stirred worries that Beijing may start to shift some of its massive dollar holdings into other currencies and assets.
Analysts said that China's central bank has made similar comments before and the latest remarks were used as an excuse to sell the dollar, which was already undermined on Thursday by a soft University of Michigan consumer sentiment survey.
The euro was up 0.3 percent at $1.2860 after earlier climbing to $1.2868 on electronic trading platform EBS, the highest since the start of September.
The dollar changed hands at 1.2390 Swiss francs after falling to around 1.2375 francs, the lowest since late September. The dollar slipped 0.3 percent to 117.55 yen but was off the day's low of 117.37 yen.
The euro inched down to 151.15 yen, backing away from the record high of 151.48 yen hit on EBS the previous day. The yen jumped after Fukui said in parliament that there are substantial risks of a sharp unwinding if carry trades are big, and the central bank is watching with vigilance.
The yen has been pummelled on the prospects of only slow rate hikes in Japan, prompting Japanese investors to seek higher returns abroad and a wide array of market players to use the yen for carry trades.

Copyright Reuters, 2006

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