Won and peso higher

14 Aug, 2010

The South Korean won and Philippine peso firmed on Friday, tracking stronger Asian stocks and gains in the euro, but the Chinese yuan hit a fresh six-week low after the central bank set a weaker daily mid-point. The dollar index, a gauge of the its performance against six major currencies, fell 0.4 percent ahead of a spate of US data, including retail sales, consumer confidence and consumer prices, later in the day.
The euro extended early gains to $1.2892, up 0.5 percent on the day, after data showed Germany's economy grew by a stronger-than-expected 2.2 percent in the second quarter. But the dollar fought its way higher on the yen following a report Japan's prime minister and the head of its central bank would meet to discuss ways to deal with the Japanese currency's export-sapping strength.
Thai markets were shut for a holiday. The Philippine peso gained nearly 0.4 percent to 45.21 per dollar thanks to broad dollar weakness. A break of 44.75 will take peso towards 44.50, last hit on May 13.
On the downside, the peso may face some near-term pressure against the dollar following its recent rally but the 100-day MA, which is at 45.60 on Friday, should provide some support, charts show. Peso has gained just over 2 percent against the dollar in the past three weeks.
Meanwhile, one-month dollar/peso NDFs fell to 45.35 from 45.49 late on Thursday. The South Korean won briefly fell to 1,191.9 per dollar but rebounded to 1,180.9 - up half of a percent from Thursday's close - as rising local stocks and a firmer euro prompted investors to clear dollar-long positions.
Dealers said they had not yet seen won selling linked to Hyundai Heavy Industries Co Ltd's purchase of a controlling stake in a local refiner from Abu Dhabi-based International Petroleum Investment Co. "Weaker US stocks prompted investors to prefer dollar-long positions initially. But local shares are strong and the euro rose, causing them to clear the positions," said a foreign bank dealer.

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