Commodity currencies climb as stock markets rise

Reuters

Published Apr 20, 2016 07:59AM ET

Commodity currencies climb as stock markets rise

By Patrick Graham

LONDON (Reuters) - Commodity-linked currencies such as the Australian and Canadian dollars inched toward recent peaks on Wednesday as stock markets in Europe rose, boosting appetite for riskier assets and currencies.

European stock markets bounced (FTEU3) <.GDAX> after starting the day in the red and U.S. stock futures pointed to gains on Wall Street. Also, with iron ore prices hitting 10-month highs, the Australian dollar rose back toward highs last seen in June last year. It was last trading 0.1 percent higher at $0.7820.

"Stock are rising and a generally optimistic mood about commodities like iron ore, are helping commodity-linked to resume their upward trek," said a spot trader.

Earlier, a sharp drop in oil prices had knocked down both the Australian and Canadian currencies from multi-month highs struck on Tuesday. But oil prices pared losses and offered support to assets like stocks and commodities. [O/R]

The euro was slightly higher at $1.1375 , with options markets showing speculative activity ahead of Thursday's European Central Bank meeting was far more subdued than the run-in to recent policy decisions.

"The ECB are going to do nothing tomorrow. (ECB chief Mario) Draghi might try to play up how big their package of easing was a month ago, but I don't think he's really going to rattle the currency," said Richard Benson, head of portfolio investment at currency managers Millennium Global.

"The euro can move a couple of percent lower before the end of the month but that will just be the result of a repricing of U.S. money markets."

The U.S. Federal Reserve's caution over raising interest rates, coupled with ultra-loose monetary policies in Japan and Europe, have driven U.S. market rates lower in the past month, broadly weakening the greenback.

Sterling fell back from 3-week highs above $1.44 touched on Tuesday to trade at $1.4380 GBP=D4 after data showed the number of unemployed in Britain rising while wage growth fell short of expectations.