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GLOBAL MARKETS-Dollar tramples yen and safe-haven status, gold gains

Published 02/21/2020, 01:09 AM
Updated 02/21/2020, 01:16 AM
GLOBAL MARKETS-Dollar tramples yen and safe-haven status, gold gains
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* Dollar bulldozes other currencies, yen at 10-month low
* China rate cut done, market focus returns to virus spread
* Gold prices near seven-year high
* World FX rates in 2020 http://tmsnrt.rs/2egbfVh

By Herbert Lash
NEW YORK, Feb 20 (Reuters) - The strong dollar got stronger
on Thursday, rising to a three-year high against a basket of
trading partner currencies, after a steep slide in the Japanese
yen called into question its safe-haven status while the rally
in U.S. equities took a pause.
Gold prices hit their highest level in seven years as
investors sought safe-haven assets after a rise in the number of
new coronavirus cases in South Korea and the price of oil rose,
supported by China's efforts to bolster its virus-weakened
economy.
The dollar has surged almost 2% since Tuesday against the
yen, reaching its highest in almost 10 months, and the greenback
climbed to near three-year highs against the euro.
The dollar index .DXY of the world's most-traded
currencies rose 0.12% to its highest level since May 2017.
The index is up 3.6% this year. It also gained to its best
levels of the year against China's offshore yuan and MSCI's
index .MIEM00000CUS of emerging-market currencies.
A host of reasons were cited for the dollar's move, ranging
from the outperformance of the U.S. economy and corporate
earnings to potential recessions in Japan and the euro zone.
A run of dire economic news out of Japan has stirred talk
the country is already in recession and that Japanese funds were
dumping local assets in favor of U.S. shares and gold.
"The strongest explanation (for the yen's decline) is a
widespread selling by Japanese asset managers amid growing fears
about the health of Japan's economy," said Raffi Boyadijian,
investment analyst at XM.
The yen's slide is unusual because the exchange rate with
the dollar has been unraveling from its close correlation to the
price of gold and U.S. Treasury yields, a development that must
be watched, he said.
"This raises question marks about whether the yen is losing
some of its shine as the world's preferred safe-haven currency,"
Boyadijian said.
China reported a drop in new virus cases and announced an
interest rate cut to buttress its economy. But
South Korea recorded an increase in new cases, Japan reported
two deaths and researchers said the pathogen seemed to spread
more easily than previously believed.
A rally that had lifted major U.S. and European stock
indexes to record highs this week lost steam, as investors
fretted about the spread of the coronavirus outside of China.
MSCI's gauge of stocks across the globe .MIWD00000PUS shed
0.84% and emerging market stocks .MSCIEF lost 0.95%.
The pan-European STOXX 600 index .STOXX lost 0.62%.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average .DJI fell 283.03 points,
or 0.96%, to 29,065. The S&P 500 .SPX lost 30.99 points, or
0.92%, to 3,355.16 and the Nasdaq Composite .IXIC dropped
131.33 points, or 1.34%, to 9,685.85.
Morgan Stanley's multibillion-dollar buyout for E*Trade
Financial boosted the discount brokerage's shares.
E*Trade ETFC.O jumped 24.4% after Morgan Stanley MS.N
offered to pay $13 billion in an all-stock deal, the biggest
acquisition by a Wall Street bank since the financial crisis.
Morgan Stanley's shares fell 3.6%.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan
.MIAPJ0000PUS slipped 0.5% overnight, led by drops in Hong
Kong's Hang Seng .HSI and South Korea's KOSPI .KS11 .
Spot gold XAU= rose 0.3% to $1,616.74 an ounce, after
hitting its highest since February 2013 at $1,622.19.
Oil prices rose further after a U.S. report showed a draw in
gasoline inventories and a much smaller-than-anticipated rise in
crude stocks.
U.S. gasoline stockpiles USOILG=ECI fell 2 million barrels
in the week to Feb. 14. Analysts had estimated an increase of
400,000 barrels.
Data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA)
showed that crude inventories USOILC=ECI rose only 414,000
barrels last week, compared with a 2.5 million-barrel rise that
analysts had expected in a Reuters poll. EIA/S
Brent crude futures LCOc1 rose 58 cents to $59.70 a barrel
and West Texas Intermediate CLc1 gained 91 cents to $54.20 a
barrel.
Demand for safe-haven U.S. Treasury debt was robust, driving
the 30-year bond yield below the psychologically significant 2%
level to its lowest since September 2019.
The 30-year bond US30YT=RR last rose 39/32 in price to
push its yield down to 1.9626%.
Benchmark 10-year notes US10YT=RR last rose 17/32 in price
to yield 1.5135%.

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Dollar surge since start of year https://tmsnrt.rs/37FbYG5
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