Yen Advances vs Dollar and European Euro Stocks Eyed for Direction
Sterling added 1.5 percent to $1.5200 after breaking above the the $1.51 area, which Dolan said was a key trend line in a steady decline that began when it traded around $1.66. Traders shrugged off minutes from this month’s Bank of England policy meeting that showed policymakers unanimously agreed to cut interest rates by 150 basis points and even discussed a bigger cut. The yen rises along with risk aversion because investors unwind trades in higher-yielding assets and currencies that had been financed with cheaply borrowed yen. Also of particular concern was the fate of the struggling U.S. auto industry, which some investors fear may fail to win emergency government loans.
Michael Woolfolk, senior currency strategist at The Bank of New York-Mellon, said bankruptcy for General Motors, Ford or Chrysler “could prove to be the next Lehman Brothers because of the systematic risk their failure would create.”Markets tumbled in September when U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers failed. Equities moved dramatically lower in October and the dollar and yen rallied, and most people still fear moves in that direction will reassert themselves,” said David Watt, currency strategist at RBC Capital Markets in Toronto. Economic data on Wednesday showed U.S. consumer prices plunged 1 percent in October, while core prices that remove food and energy costs fell 0.1 percent.
Kathy Lien, head of currency research at GFT Forex in New York, said “less price pressure will give the Federal Reserve more room to cut interest rates,” adding she expects the federal funds rate to drop to 0.5 percent from its current 1 percent next month.


