Thursday, September 03, 2009

NEW YORK: The yen and dollar both rose on Tuesday as fears of further US bank failures overshadowed unexpectedly strong manufacturing data, boosting the two currencies' safe-haven appeal. On Wall Street, US stock indexes were all down around 2 percent at the close as investors fretted that chatter from hedge funds on a bank failure could prove accurate.

The decline came despite upbeat economic news from the United States and euro zone as well as a stabilisation in Chinese shares after a rout on Monday. The hedge fund talk "is a huge driver" of currency markets, said Dan Cook, senior market analyst at IG Markets Inc in Chicago. "When you have data like we had but the Dow drops, people are running for that safe haven." In late afternoon trading in New York the dollar index, which tracks a basket of six major currencies, was up 0.7 percent at 78.747, rebounding from a session low of 77.944, according to Reuters data.

The dollar was down 0.1 percent against the yen at 92.89 yen, above Monday's seven-week low of 92.53, according to Reuters data. But the yen was up 1 percent against the Canadian dollar, 0.7 percent against the Swiss franc, 0.9 percent against the euro and 0.8 percent against the pound. The euro was down 0.8 percent against the dollar at $1.4212, well below a session high of $1.4377.

The US manufacturing sector expanded in August for the first time in more than a year and a half. The Institute for Supply Management's index of national factory activity rose to 52.9 from 48.9 in July. Separate data showed pending sales of previously owned US homes raced to a two-year high in July, further evidence the housing market was on a steady recovery path.

"Clearly, the US data is surprising to the upside," said Jack Iles, senior portfolio manager who helps manage $2.5 billion assets at MFC Global Investment Management in Boston. But despite a batch of upbeat US economic numbers, major currencies remained in ranges as investors continued to debate about the outlook for the global economy, analysts said.


(Reuters)

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