Yen hits six-week low

26 Dec, 2007

The yen dipped to a six-week low against the dollar on Monday and fell against the euro as a pre-Christmas equities rally boosted investors' risk appetite. Sterling also fell to a record low against the euro for the second straight session after weak UK housing data reinforced expectations for more Bank of England interest rate cuts in 2008, possibly as soon January.
Trading activity was light as Tokyo and some European centers were closed for holidays, while US activity wound down. For those still active ahead of Christmas, guarded optimism seemed to be the prevailing mood, with global stock market gains prompting a move back into carry trades, which use cheaply borrowed yen to buy higher-yield assets.
The Japanese currency "is still vulnerable to spikes in risk aversion. However, as we move into year-end markets seem relatively calm," Camilla Sutton, a currency strategist at ScotiaCapital in Toronto, said. "We expect the current upward USD/JPY trend to continue."
Investors also welcomed brokerage Merrill Lynch's announcement that it plans to sell most of its capital lending business to General Electric Co's finance arm and get a capital infusion of up to $6.2 billion in a private placement with Singapore state investor Temasek Holdings and Davis Selected Advisors, a US-based asset manager.
"In holiday-thinned trade, investors are trying to lock in high-yielders, so you see the yen and Swiss franc doing badly and the higher yielding currencies, including many emerging market currencies, doing well," said Marc Chandler, senior currency strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman in New York.
In early afternoon trade in New York, the dollar was up 0.3 percent at 114.42 yen, its highest level since November 7. The euro was up 0.5 percent at 164.73 yen and also gained 0.3 percent to $1.4401.
The euro also rose to a record high of 72.84 pence, up 0.6 percent on the day, after British data showed annual house price inflation in England and Wales at its lowest point in 1-1/2 years in December. That added to concern about a slowing UK economy and expected Bank of England rate cuts. The high-yield Australian dollar rose 0.4 percent to US $0.8707. The New Zealand dollar climbed 0.5 percent to US $0.7669.

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