Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Dollar Falls as Housing Reports May Bolster Case for Fed Cuts

The dollar fell against 15 of the 16 most-active currencies on concern industry and government reports will show the housing recession in the U.S. is deepening.

The U.S. currency declined to a two-week low against the euro on speculation the Federal Reserve will keep cutting its benchmark interest rate from 3 percent. Australia's dollar rose to a three-month high after the nation's central bank said it considered a larger increase when raising borrowing costs to an 11-year high of 7 percent this month.

``We think there's a chance we'll break $1.48 against the euro on the expectation the U.S. will cut rates,'' said Chris Furness, head of currency strategy in London at 4Cast Ltd., a research company that counts central banks among its subscribers. ``We still have a problem. We don't know whether it's going to be recession or not.''

The dollar fell to $1.4742 per euro, the lowest since Feb. 5, and traded at $1.4726 as of 8:45 a.m. in London, from $1.4658 in New York yesterday. It weakened to 107.86 yen from 108.23 yen. The euro was at 158.90 yen, from 158.63.

Japan's currency also advanced against the dollar, or greenback, on speculation that China's central bank will raise borrowing costs and seek a stronger exchange rate to curb the fastest inflation in more than 11 years.

The U.S. currency fell 0.7 percent to 91.97 cents versus Australia's dollar, reaching the lowest since Nov. 9. The U.S. greenback also declined against the New Zealand dollar to 79.79 U.S. cents, near the lowest since July 26, from 79.52 yesterday.

Australian Dollar

The Australian dollar rose versus all 16 major currencies after central bank Assistant Governor Malcolm Edey said inflation may accelerate.

Minutes from the Reserve Bank of Australia's Feb. 5 meeting published today showed Governor Glenn Stevens and his colleagues discussed raising the benchmark rate by 50 basis points to cool the fastest inflation in almost two decades.

``The discussion about monetary policy in the minutes had a much sharper sting in the tail as far as the near-term rate outlook is concerned,'' wrote David de Garis, senior markets economist at National Australia Bank Ltd. in Sydney, in a note to clients. ``We still expect a 25 basis-point increase in March and a 40 percent chance of another.''

The yield advantage on Australian two-year bonds over similar-maturity U.S. Treasuries increased to 5.09 percentage points, the widest since December 1990.

The U.S. dollar dropped 5.1 percent versus the euro since the Federal Reserve started to cut interest rates on Sept. 18, the fourth-worst performer among the 16 most-active currencies.

`Sense of Vigilance'

``The markets have a heightened sense of vigilance before the U.S. housing data and are selling dollars,'' said Kenichiro Fujita, manager of derivatives-marketing in Tokyo at Aozora Bank Ltd., Japan's ninth-largest publicly traded lender by assets. ``The Fed will cut rates to 2 percent to support the economy and to avoid criticism that it always falls behind the curve.''

Dollar Falls as Housing Reports May Bolster Case for Fed Cuts

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