Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Dollar down, gold and oil rise

       The dollar weakened for the first time in three days against the euro aon speculation group-of-20 leaders this week will call for gains in other currencies to help reduce global trade imbalances.
       Gold rose for the first time in four days in London as a sliding dollar boosted demand for the preciousmetal as an alternative investment.
       Crude oil also rose for the first time in four days before a report forecast to show US crude supplies contracting, while a weaker dollar boosted the investment appeal of commodities.
       The greenback fell versus 14 of the 16 major currencies after a spokesman for Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper said leaders meeting in Pittsburgh on September 24-25 will discuss "a frameworkd for balanced and sustainable growth".
       New Zealand's dollar rose toward a six-week high against the yen after a government report showed the current-account deficit shrank to the narrowest in more than four years.
       "There's talk that world leaders may seek to address the US imnalances," said Masashi Kurabe, head of currency sales and trading in hong Kong at Bank of Tokyo Mitsubishi UFJ, a unit of Japan's biggest publicly trded bank. "This may lead to weakness in the dollar."
       The US currency dropped to $1.4714 per euro as of early afternoon in Tokyo, from $1.4680 on Monday in New York. It declined to 91.75 from 91.93 and weakened to $1.6237 per pound from $1.6217. The yen was little changed at 135.01 versus the euro from 134.96.
       New Zealand's dollar strengthened 1.2 per cent to 65.79, after earlier climbing to 65.89, the highest level since August 10. The so-called kiwi rose 1.5 per cent to 71.71 US cents. Australia's dollar advanced 0.7 per cent to 86.93 cents.
       The US dollar Index, a six-currency gauge of the currency's strength, slipped as much a s.9 per cent as signs the global economy is recovering spurred investors into buying higheryielding assets.
       The measure has dropped 6.3 per cent this yer as gold, trading 1.9 per cent below a record $1,032.70 an ounce set in March 2008, has climbed 15 per cent.
       "It's mainly dollar driven" and "in the longer term we still expect more dollafr weakness," said Walter de Wet, a London-based Standard Bank analyst. "When we approached the mid-$990 level, there was some physical buying coming in and providing some support."
       COMMODITIES
       Immediate-delivery bullion gained $9.80, ir 1 per cent, to $1,013.50 an ounce by mid-morning local time. The commodity on Monday dropped as low as $995.97 an ounce. December gold futures were 1 per cent higher at $1,014.90 an ounce on the New York Mercantile Exchange's Comex division.
       US crude oil inventories declined a fourth week,according to analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News before an Energy Department report due today. Official data showed net crude oil imports by China,Asia's largest consumer, rose 18 per cent to 17.92 million tonnes in August, the second highest on record.

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