Clark - re Brazil
Dollar Sets 28-Month Low vs Yen Amid Brazil Concern (Update6)
London, Jan. 11 (Bloomberg) -- The dollar tumbled to a 28- month low against the yen on concern Brazil's debt and currency woes will crimp economic growth in the U.S., which does a fifth of its trade with Latin America.
The yen also got a boost from speculation that Japanese investors and firms, eager to show gains on their balance sheets before the fiscal year ends on March 31, will sell higher- yielding assets overseas and convert the dollar proceeds to yen. ''If things go wrong in Brazil, that's going to have a negative effect on emerging markets, U.S. markets and most importantly, the dollar,'' said Tom Berger, head of fixed income at Invesco Asset Management, which oversees $9 billion in London. Also in the yen's favor, ''there are going to be capital flows into the yen because of the (fiscal) year-end.''
The dollar fell as low as 108.53 yen, its lowest since Aug. 30, 1996, when it fell to 108.29. That was its largest decline in almost two months. In midday trading in London, it fell to 109.15 yen from 110.85 late Friday.
The dollar was little changed against the European Union's single currency, leaving the euro at $1.1595, compared with $1.1585 late Friday. Traders avoided the euro after reports pointed to a slowing economy in Germany, the largest of the 11 nations that adopted the euro. Those reports fueled expectations for lower European interest rates.
Some traders also sold dollars amid speculation a drawn-out impeachment trial of President Bill Clinton would sour global investors on U.S. assets.
The U.S. currency could fall as low as 105 yen in the coming days, said Tony Norris, a director at First International Advisors Ltd., which has more than $300 million under management.
Latin Tangle
In Brazil, speculation spread that Brazilian Finance Minister Pedro Malan would resign. That raised concern the country would back away from a commitment to financial reforms it needs to make get international aid. Brazil's Finance Ministry denied Malan intended to resign.
Concern deepened after Estado de S. Paulo, a Brazilian newspaper, said Brazil will report a trade deficit in 1999, missing a target set in its November agreement with the International Monetary Fund. The article cited preliminary figures released by the Brazilian Foreign Trade Association.
The speculation about Malan and the trade gap aggravated a decline by Brazilian stocks and bonds last week. They fell after a Brazilian state, Minas Gerais, said it would delay paying some of its debt to the federal government. Other states threatened to follow suit. ''The problems in Brazil are terrible for the dollar,'' said Conrad Mattern, a currency analyst at DG Bank in Frankfurt.
Bring It On Home
The dollar also was dragged down amid speculation that Japanese investors, eager to show gains on their balance sheets before the fiscal year ends on March 31, may sell higher-yielding assets overseas and convert the dollar proceeds to yen. ''There's some repatriation by Japanese investors who are mindful of the potential for further yen appreciation,'' said Alan Wilde, who manages about $3.5 billion of bonds at Scottish Mutual Portfolio Management.
The yen's gains, which increase the price of Japanese exports, fueled talk that Japanese officials may soon sell yen to weaken the currency. Japanese Vice Finance Minister Koji Tanami said the yen's ''excessive strength is undesirable'' and Japan is ready to act to curtail its gains against the dollar.
Trying Clinton
The U.S. currency also was hurt by concern Clinton's impeachment trial will lead some global investors to avoid U.S. stocks and bonds and the dollars needed to pay for them. ''What weighed on the dollar was uncertainty over Clinton's impeachment trial,'' Yasuharu Tsuru, a manager for international treasury division at Mitsubishi Trust & Banking Co. in Tokyo, said.
The U.S. Senate agreed Friday to begin Clinton's trial later this week, while postponing a decision on whether to call witnesses to testify. The agreement ended a week of doubt over how the Senate would proceed with the first impeachment trial of a president in 131 years.
The dollar still might gain against the yen and euro in coming weeks, supported by signs of strength in the U.S. economy. A report Friday showed U.S. unemployment fell to a 28-year low of 4.3 percent in December as companies adding 378,000 new workers. That made it less likely the Fed will lower interest rates soon.
Euro Slowdown
Meantime, a report today showed that orders to Germany's manufacturing industry unexpectedly fell 1.5 percent in November, reinforcing expectations for a German slowdown and giving the European Central Bank added reason to lower interest rates to keep the nations that adopted the euro from slowing too much.
Another report on Friday showed Germany's unemployment rate unexpectedly rose in December, to 10.8 percent, kindling speculation the European Central Bank will cut rates in coming months to keep growth in the euro nations from slowing too much. ''Europe is definitely slowing down,'' said Jeff Woodruff, a currency strategist at BankBoston. ''As that comes into play, we'll see the dollar strengthen against the euro. European unemployment is double that in the United States.''
Dominique Strauss-Kahn, France's finance minister, said European interest rates could be cut in the coming months providing European inflation, currently about 1 percent, remains low. ''It seems to me today not inconceivable that interest rates continue to fall in Europe'' as long as they are accompanied by continued government efforts to reduce budget deficits, Strauss- Kahn said in a French television interview.
Benchmark interest rates in the 11 nations adopting the euro were cut to 3.00 percent before the European Union adopted its single currency on Jan. 1. The comparable U.S. rate for overnight borrowing between banks is at 4.75 percent, making the dollar relatively more attractive than the euro.
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