Dollar recovers from 2-1/2-year lows as North Korea fears ebb

Reuters

Published Aug 29, 2017 04:05PM ET

Dollar recovers from 2-1/2-year lows as North Korea fears ebb

By Sam Forgione

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The U.S. dollar turned positive against a basket of major rivals on Tuesday after touching its lowest level in more than 2-1/2 years as traders brushed aside concerns surrounding a North Korean missile launch over Japan.

The dollar, which had touched its lowest level against the yen in 4-1/2 months earlier on widespread risk aversion following North Korea's launch of a ballistic missile over northern Japan's Hokkaido island into the sea, jumped more than half a percent against the Japanese currency in afternoon U.S. trading to a 12-day high of 109.89 yen .

The euro was last roughly flat against the greenback at $1.1980 after earlier hitting a more than 2-1/2-year high and breaking through the critical $1.20 level to $1.2069 .

"All that Korea news you can still classify in the ‘known unknown' category," said Shahab Jalinoos, global head of FX strategy at Credit Suisse (SIX:CSGN) in New York. "None of it is anything the market has never seen before, so the market's capacity to bounce back from that was really high."

He also said the U.S. stock market's recovery had calmed some of the fears that had weighed on the dollar, and that investors were beginning to turn their focus to Friday's U.S. non-farm payrolls data for August.

The dollar index (DXY), which measures the greenback against a basket of six major currencies, was last up 0.1 percent at 92.336 after touching its lowest since January 2015 of 91.621 earlier.

The missile launch had in part prompted short-term speculators such as macro hedge funds to buy back yen in an unwinding of so-called carry trades, Sireen Harajli, foreign exchange strategist at Mizuho in New York, said earlier regarding the dollar's weakness.

The dollar was last flat against the Swiss franc, another safe-haven currency, at 0.9549 franc after touching a two-year low of 0.9431 earlier.

"Things have kind of settled down with Korea," said Win Thin, global head of emerging market currency strategy at Brown Brothers Harriman in New York. "In the past, it has always been you have knee-jerk selling...but it eventually wears off."