Dollar retreats against most peers

Bank notes of Euro, Hong Kong dollar, U.S. dollar, Japanese yen, GB pound and Chinese yuan are seen in this picture illustration

Bank notes of Euro, Hong Kong dollar, U.S. dollar, Japanese yen, GB pound and Chinese yuan are seen in this picture illustration

Published Dec 19, 2016

Share

Washington - The dollar

retreated against most major peers in Asian trade on Monday as investors

cashed in after a Federal Reserve-fuelled surge last week, while equities were

also lower due to China-US tensions.

The losses

tracked a decline on Wall Street after it emerged China had seized an unmanned

US sea survey probe from international waters in the South China Sea.

Thursday's

move raised geopolitical concerns as Donald Trump prepares to enter the White

House, having hit out at Beijing in recent weeks over several issues from

Taiwan to trade.

Last week

the dollar soared after the Fed raised borrowing costs and hinted at three more

increases next year -- surprising many who had priced in two -- as it prepares

for steeper price rises if Trump honours promises of tax cuts and big

infrastructure spending.

But in

afternoon trading Monday the greenback was down against the yen, euro and

pound, while some emerging market currencies -- which were hammered by a flight

of cash to the dollar - were also up.

However,

the Malaysian ringgit touched lows not seen since the 1998 Asian financial

crisis.

"I

can’t see the dollar index in a sustained rally - two rate hikes are priced

into fed funds futures, and a lot of expectation is built into  Trump’s

policies," Janu Chan, a senior economist at St. George Bank in Sydney,

told Bloomberg News.

"On

the other side of the equation, the (European Central Bank) and (Bank of Japan)

are not likely to ramp up monetary stimulus any more. Profit-taking is most

likely behind current US dollar weakness but it’s possible it’s also due to geopolitical

concerns on the reports that China seized the US drone."

Not-so

super Mario 

On stock

markets Japan's Nikkei closed in negative territory, the first loss after nine

successive gains.

The index

ended down 0.1 percent, with Nintendo diving more than seven percent as its new

game Super Mario Run received tepid reviews, a far cry from the global

phenomenon that was Pokemon Go earlier this year. 

The firm's

shares fell more than four percent Friday.

"Investor

expectations were very strong," said Hideki Yasuda, an analyst at Ace

Research Institute. "There are a lot of people writing on the App Store

that Super Mario Run isn’t very fun. Perhaps expectations were too high."

Hong Kong

closed down 0.9 percent, Shanghai ended down 0.2 percent and Singapore lost 0.8

percent, while Seoul slipped 0.2 percent. There were also sharp losses in

Taipei, Jakarta and Manila.

However,

Sydney added 0.5 percent as the government stuck to its plan to return the

budget to surplus by 2021 and despite downgrading forecasts for economic

growth, with fears growing it could lose its AAA credit rating. 

In early

European trade London was flat, Paris fell 0.3 percent and Frankfurt lost 0.2

percent.

AFP

 

Related Topics: