Dollar falls broadly on speculation of no change on Fed's near-zero language: Sept 17, 2014


Market Review - 16/09/2014 22:58GMT 

Dollar falls broadly on speculation of no change on Fed's near-zero language

U.S. dollar fell broadly against major currencies on Wednesday on speculation of no change on the Fed's near-zero language in the upcoming policy statement to be released on Thursday as traders cited WSJ video saying Fed will stick to near-zero rate language. The single currency jumped to 1.2985 and then 1.2995 in New York before retreating. The greenback fell to 106.81 before paring some losses. The British pound rallied to as high as 1.6310 in New York before retreating.

Despite initial brief drop to 106.93, U.S. dollar rebounded to 107.33 after comments from BOJ's governor Kuroda. Price later tumbled to 106.81 in New York on WSJ video saying Fed will stick to near-zero rate language but only to rebound to 107.22.

Bank of Japan's governor Kuroda said hard to control yen levels with Japan policy alone as FX rates also move on other factors such as U.S., European, Asian economic conditions; want to do our best to maintain FX stability via solid coordination between gov't, BoJ; we will maintain QQE to ensure economic conditions remain strong enough for firms to translate risks costs to consumers; recovery from post-sales tax hike has been quite slow for housing investment; strongly hope gov't keeps up efforts on growth strategy as third arrow of Abenomics becoming increasingly important for econ growth.'

The single currency traded in a volatile fashion on Tuesday. Despite retreating from Asian high at 1.2962 to 1.2923 in European morning, euro jumped to as high as 1.2995 in New York as traders cited WSJ video saying Fed will stick to near-zero rate language but selling interest below 1.3000 psychological knocked price lower later.

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said in an interview that the European Central Bank (ECB) has assured Germany it is not trying to manipulate the euro, adding he was not concerned about recent swings in the single currency's exchange rate. Schaeuble said "the president of the ECB confirmed in my presence in Milan (on the weekend) that the ECB is of course sticking to the agreements we have made in the framework of the G7 and G20."

The British pound swung wildly again on Tuesday ahead of Thursday’s Scottish independence referendum. Cable dropped briefly to 1.6162 in European morning and then jumped to as high as 1.6310 in New York due to dollar’s broad-based weakness.

U.K. PM David Cameron used his last visit to Scotland to implore Scots to remain part of the U.K. and warned that a breakaway vote would be irreversible. Cameron pleaded with voters not to use the Scottish independence referendum as a protest vote. "There's no going back from this. No re-run. If Scotland votes 'yes' the UK will split and we will go our separate ways forever," he told an audience packed with Conservative party supporters in Aberdeen. "Don't think : I'm frustrated with politics right now, so I'll walk out the door. If you don't like me I won't be here forever. If you don't like this government it won't last forever. But if you leave the UK that will be forever."

Wednesday will see the release of New Zealand's current account, Bank of England minutes, U.K. average earnings, claimant count unemployment, ILO unemployment, Swiss ZEW investor sentiment, eurozone inflation, U.S. core CPI, CPI, current account, NAHB housing market index, FOMC rate decision and monetary policy statement.

Recommended Content


Recommended Content

Editors’ Picks

AUD/USD hovers around 0.6500 amid light trading, ahead of US GDP

AUD/USD hovers around 0.6500 amid light trading, ahead of US GDP

AUD/USD is trading close to 0.6500 in Asian trading on Thursday, lacking a clear directional impetus amid an Anzac Day holiday in Australia. Meanwhile, traders stay cautious due ti risk-aversion and ahead of the key US Q1 GDP release. 

AUD/USD News

USD/JPY finds its highest bids since 1990, near 155.50

USD/JPY finds its highest bids since 1990, near 155.50

USD/JPY keeps breaking into its highest chart territory since June of 1990 early Thursday, testing 155.50 for the first time in 34 years as the Japanese Yen remains vulnerable, despite looming Japanese intervention risks. Focus shifts to Thursday's US GDP report and the BoJ decision on Friday. 

USD/JPY News

Gold price lacks firm intraday direction, holds steady above $2,300 ahead of US data

Gold price lacks firm intraday direction, holds steady above $2,300 ahead of US data

Gold price remains confined in a narrow band for the second straight day on Thursday. Reduced Fed rate cut bets and a positive risk tone cap the upside for the commodity. Traders now await key US macro data before positioning for the near-term trajectory.

Gold News

Injective price weakness persists despite over 5.9 million INJ tokens burned

Injective price weakness persists despite over 5.9 million INJ tokens burned

Injective price is trading with a bearish bias, stuck in the lower section of the market range. The bearish outlook abounds despite the network's deflationary efforts to pump the price. Coupled with broader market gloom, INJ token’s doomed days may not be over yet.

Read more

Meta Platforms Earnings: META sinks 10% on lower Q2 revenue guidance Premium

Meta Platforms Earnings: META sinks 10% on lower Q2 revenue guidance

This must be "opposites" week. While Doppelganger Tesla rode horrible misses on Tuesday to a double-digit rally, Meta Platforms produced impressive beats above Wall Street consensus after the close on Wednesday, only to watch the share price collapse by nearly 10%.

Read more

Majors

Cryptocurrencies

Signatures