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FOREX-Pound at week-high, dollar sinks as risk-on mood cautiously holds

Published 05/09/2019, 02:16
Updated 05/09/2019, 02:20
FOREX-Pound at week-high, dollar sinks as risk-on mood cautiously holds
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* Pound holds gains as no-deal Brexit fears ebb

* Dollar, yen sold as risk-on mood returns

* Graphic: World FX rates in 2019 http://tmsnrt.rs/2egbfVh

By Tom Westbrook

SINGAPORE, Sept 5 (Reuters) - The British pound hovered

around a one-week high on Thursday as another parliamentary

defeat for Prime Minister Boris Johnson made investors

optimistic that a no-deal Brexit could be avoided, while a

broader risk-on mood held back the dollar.

The dollar fell against most major currencies, though gained

on the safe-haven yen, as the UK parliamentary vote, positive

economic data in the United States and China and hopes for a

de-escalation in Hong Kong's political crisis lured investors to

riskier assets.

The pound GBP=D3 was at $1.2242, after its best day

against the dollar in more than five months, and the euro

EUR=EBS also climbed 0.6% to $1.1033. Against a basket of

currencies .DXY the dollar hit a one-week low of 98.390.

The British parliament voted on Wednesday to prevent Johnson

from taking Britain out of the European Union without a deal on

Oct. 31, but rejected his first bid to call a snap election two

weeks before the scheduled exit. "While there is no 'all clear' on market concerns, investor

sentiment pulled back from extremes," said Michael McCarthy,

chief market strategist at brokerage CMC Markets in Sydney.

"Currency markets illustrated the shift...the U.S. dollar

played a passive role as markets wait for the next trade tweets

to drop."

The Canadian dollar CAD= spiked sharply to C$1.3344 per

dollar after the Bank of Canada left interest rates on hold and

sounded less dovish than the market had expected.

The more upbeat mood cautiously held in morning trade in

Asia, though few expected it to last long.

Brexit is still up in the air, with possible outcomes

ranging from a no-deal exit from the EU to abandoning the whole

endeavour.

"It's important to keep in mind that the situation

continues to look pretty bad," J.P. Morgan analysts reminded

investors in a market note, pointing out that Johnson is pushing

for a snap election and a so-called "hard Brexit" remains an

option.

The weak global trade outlook is also still a key worry,

with U.S. President Donald Trump warning on Tuesday he would be

"tougher" on Beijing in a second term if talks dragged on.

And it was not clear whether Hong Kong would return to calm

after leader Carrie Lam withdraw an extradition bill that

triggered months of often violent protests. That caution kept the yen's JPY=EBS losses reasonably

muted, though it did drift a little further lower to 106.42

per-dollar, its cheapest since Friday.

The yuan CNH= held on to Wednesday's gains at around

7.1487 per dollar in offshore trade.

China will implement both broad and targeted cuts in the

reserve requirement ratio (RRR) for banks "in a timely manner,"

China's cabinet said in a meeting on Wednesday, an indication

that a cut in the key ratio aimed at boosting lending could be

imminent. "A drop in geopolitical risk premium comes as a welcome

relief," said Stephen Innes, Asia Pacific market strategist at

AxiTrader.

"But with the omnipresent trade war clouds looming ominously

over the market threatening to come thundering down at any time,

the air remains thick with caution."

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