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Business / World Business

Dollar gains, sterling slides after Christmas

Published: 27 Dec 2016 - 08:46 pm | Last Updated: 05 Nov 2021 - 12:51 am
An employee counts US dollars in a foreign exchange office in central Cairo Egypt November 3, 2016 (REUTERS / Mohamed Abd El Ghany)

An employee counts US dollars in a foreign exchange office in central Cairo Egypt November 3, 2016 (REUTERS / Mohamed Abd El Ghany)

Reuters

London: The dollar inched higher against the yen and a handful of other major currencies in holiday-thinned trade yesterday, with sterling by far the biggest faller as concerns over next year's Brexit negotiations continued to weigh heavily.
Going into the final week of 2017, the trend remains towards a stronger US currency, although a 1 percent retreat for the greenback before Christmas suggested any attack on 120 yen and parity with the euro may have to wait until January.
Those bankers at their desks in continental Europe, with London on holiday, said they would be watching chiefly for any sign of a year-end squeeze in the cost for banks of borrowing dollars relative to other currencies. Such costs - called the cross currency basis - have been rising and could support the dollar over the next few days. It gained 0.25 percent to 117.40 yen and 0.1 percent to $1.0441 per euro by 1250 GMT. "The rise in the euro dollar basis is an argument for dollar strength. Plus you have the fundamental factors going into the beginning of next year that point (that way)," said Lutz Karpowitz, a strategist with Commerzbank in London. "But so far it really has been quiet."
With Hong Kong and Sydney closed, there was little reaction in Asian time to Japanese inflation data, which saw core consumer prices mark the ninth straight month of annual declines in November.
The yen has fallen by almost a fifth in value since the start of November and some in Tokyo argue that a slowing of the rise in US Treasury yields and concerns over President-elect Donald Trump's relationship with China may support the Japanese currency going forward.
"Trump's policies are understood to be conducive to inflation and a stronger currency. But a higher dollar would be a significant setback to the USeconomy seemingly in the ending stages of an expansion," wrote Makoto Noji, senior strategist at SMBC Nikko Securities.