The following Forex news reports are the latest developments of the Forex market. The news reports are updated frequently and include all the events that affect the foreign exchange trading industry.
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After talk by Japanese Finance Minister Naoto Kan about his desire to see the Yen weaken, the JPY indeed sled against the USD as a result of the impression that the country would get involved more actively in the rise of the Yen.
The U.S. Dollar recovered from Tuesday’s sharp drop in choppy Asian trading, as investors booked their profits from the U.S. currency’s earlier rally. As reported at 1:37 p.m. (JST) in Tokyo, the U.S. Dollar traded at 91.96 Yen, a gain of .2% from yesterday’s low trade of 91.25 Yen on the EBS trading platform
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The USD was majorly reduced vs. the majors in the first trading day of the new year, relinquishing the 1.44-level against the EUR and sliding to 1.0374 against the CAD. Crude oil rebounded and passed the $80 per barrel level while the global equity bourses advanced on Monday session as traders shifted back into riskier assets. The Dow Jones, Nasdaq and S&P 500 were all higher by over 1.5% by afternoon.
The U.S. Dollar recovered from Tuesday’s sharp drop in choppy Asian trading, as investors booked their profits from the U.S. currency’s earlier rally. As reported at 1:37 p.m. (JST) in Tokyo, the U.S. Dollar traded at 91.96 Yen, a gain of .2% from yesterday’s low trade of 91.25 Yen on the EBS trading platform.
The U.S. Dollar slipped broadly in early London trading today, as investors’ appetite for higher risk/higher yielding currencies increased. Recent comments from a Federal Reserve Bank official reinforced the market view that the current historically low interest rates in the United States will continue until the economy sees a stronger recovery.
In the first day of trading in the New Year, the U.S. Dollar slid from a 4-month peak versus the Japanese Yen, but managed to hold steady against other currencies as investors turn their sights to U.S. economic data to be released later this week.
The single currency Euro saw gains versus the Japanese Yen and U.S. Dollar in Asian trading today on increased risk appetite, which spurred investors to book profits on the recent dollar rally. Analysts predict a bounce back from the Euro within the next few weeks, similar to patterns it took in 2006 and 2007.
With the question of policy tightening by the Federal Reserve still in the fore, the U.S. Dollar struck a 2-month peak versus the Japanese Yen in Asian trading today. As reported at 2:28 p.m. (JST) in Tokyo, the U.S. Dollar traded at 92.26 Yen, the highest price since October; this year the U.S. Dollar has gained nearly 1.7% on the Yen compared to 2008 when it lost nearly 19%.
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The U.S. Dollar continues to make gains in Asian trading, up against both the single currency Euro and the Japanese Yen as demand for the greenback grew on hedge fun buying. Analysts predict that the U.S. Dollar may see wider gains provided that the yields on 10-year Treasury Notes rises aga
The U.S. Dollar held steady near recently established peaks versus the Japanese Yen in Asian trading today, spurred by year end corporate demand. Today is the final trading day of 2009 for a significant number of Japanese firms which will be closed until January 4th 2010
With growing investor demand for the U.S. Dollar, the Australian Dollar slipped in Asian trading today, closing lower for the 6th straight trading session and striking a new 11-week low. As reported at 5:00 p.m. (AEDT) in Sydney, the Australian Dollar traded at $0.8759; on Tuesday, it closed at $0.8794
In Tokyo trading today, the U.S. Dollar continued to gain versus the Japanese Yen, touching on a 2-month high, and the single currency Euro, which has been under recent pressure.
In Asian trading today, the U.S. Dollar held close to a 3-month peak versus the Euro as market players moved to short cover their U.S. currency positions ahead of this week’s Christmas holiday.
After three days of declines, the single currency Euro finally made some headway against the U.S. Dollar, rising to $1.4396 from $1.4338 reported yesterday in late New York trading, rebounding from an earlier low of $1.4306. The Euro’s rebound follows the release of political news from Pakistan that a coup attempt had been thwarted, reviving risk appetite for high-yielding currencies