By TraderVox.com
Further, the US currency fell as safe haven demand was hampered by surge of demand of the Asian stocks which rose for the fifth day. The yen was also affected by the advance by the Asian stocks. This led to an increase in demand for commodity related currencies such as the Australian dollar which rose to within two-months high. Mike Jones of Bank of New Zealand Ltd in Wellington said that the US economy has been slowing down and further negative reports would only add to speculations of further easing which is negative for the greenback.
The greenback dropped by 0.1 percent against the euro to trade at $1.2582 at the start of trading in the Asian Session today. It had advanced by 0.7 percent yesterday. The dollar increased slightly against ht yen, trading at 79.59 from earlier level of 79.51. The euro increased against the yen from previous reading of 100.00 to 100.14; Japanese yen had advanced by one percent against the euro yesterday.
As the MSCI Asia Pacific Index of stocks rose by 0.6 percent, the Australian dollar increased by 0.2 percent against the dollar to trade at $1.0268; it had earlier touched its highest since May 4 of $1.0278.
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