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FOREX-Asian currencies edge up, take comfort from slower virus spread

Published 11/02/2020, 05:44
Updated 11/02/2020, 05:45
© Reuters.  FOREX-Asian currencies edge up, take comfort from slower virus spread
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* Aussie dollar adds 0.3% but remains heavily sold this year

* Yuan, Asia FX advance against dollar and yen

* For an Eikon page tracking the coronavirus, click here https://amers1.apps.cp.extranet.thomsonreuters.biz/cms/?navid=747389195

* Graphic: World FX rates in 2020 https://tmsnrt.rs/2RBWI5E

By Tom Westbrook

SINGAPORE, Feb 11 (Reuters) - Heavily-sold Asian currencies

were modestly firmer on Tuesday, as investor risk appetite

recovered with an apparent slowdown in the rate of coronavirus

infection, even as the death toll rose.

China reported 108 new coronavirus deaths on Tuesday,

bringing the total number of people killed in the country to

1,016, yet the number of new cases fell. The Australian dollar, which is highly sensitive to China's

economic health because of Australia's commodity-heavy export

profile, rose 0.3% to $0.6707 AUD=D3 . It had hit a decade low

on Monday and remains nearly 4.5% lower this year. AUD/

China's yuan was firm at 6.9773 per dollar and the People's

Bank of China held its mid-point guidance relatively steady,

even though the U.S. dollar had gained sharply overnight CNY= .

"The absolute number of cases continues to climb. That

remains a worry. But where the market has taken a bit of comfort

is that the rate of infection seems to have come down," said

Bank of Singapore currency strategist Moh Siong Sim.

"The other thing that's been somewhat comforting is that the

Chinese currency has gone back below 7 (per dollar)," he said.

"That's been somewhat of a stabilising influence for the rest of

the Asian currencies."

The Japanese yen JPY= was slightly softer by mid-session

at 109.84 per dollar. Volumes were lightened because it is a

public holiday in Japan and markets there are closed.

The Korean won KRW= , Singapore dollar SGD= and Thai baht

THB= - all recently trampled in a rush to dollars and yen -

each advanced on the majors on Tuesday. EMRG/FRX

Yet, as an advance team of international experts arrived in

China to investigate the coronavirus outbreak, plenty of jitters

remain.

The World Health Organization has warned the spread of

coronavirus among people who had not been to China could be "the

spark that becomes a bigger fire".

JPMorgan has again downgraded forecasts for growth this

quarter, as businesses struggle to get back to work and supply

chain disruptions bite.

The nerves showed in the New Zealand dollar, which

languished close to a three-month low at $0.6390 NZD=D3 ahead

of a central bank policy meeting on Wednesday. RBNZWATCH

The market expects rates to be kept at a record-low 1%, but

will be closely parsing the Reserve Bank of New Zealand's choice

of words around the coronavirus' impact.

"They will probably leave the easing bias as it is," said

Westpac analyst Imre Speizer.

"But there are risks around the way they describe the

situation. They could describe it as potentially more severe

than others are seeing it, at the same time they may describe it

as less severe."

Elsewhere the greenback was marginally weaker against the

euro and pound after surging ahead overnight amid fresh signs of

divergence between the U.S. economy and Europe. Italian industrial output unexpectedly posted its steepest

decline in nearly two years on Monday, after the United States'

surprisingly recorded robust jobs figures last week.

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell appears before

Congress on Tuesday to begin two days of testimony and is

expected to reiterate that the U.S. economy is doing well but

that rates can stay low given subdued inflation.

Track the coronavirus on Eikon: https://amers1.apps.cp.extranet.thomsonreuters.biz/cms/?navid=747389195

For multimedia coverage of the coronavirus: https://graphics.reuters.com/CHINA-HEALTH/0100B59Y39P/index.html

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(Editing by Jane Wardell and Jacqueline Wong)

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