Dollar near two-month high
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By our correspondents
August 07, 2015
TOKYO: The dollar was near a two-month high against the yen on Thursday as traders increasingly bet that the Federal Reserve will hike interest rates as early as September.
In Tokyo, the dollar bought 124.75 yen, against 124.88 yen in New York Wednesday when it briefly crossed the 125 yen level, its highest since early June.
The euro stood at $1.0910 and 136.10 yen compared with $1.0904 and 136.18 yen in US trade.
On Wednesday, the Institute for Supply Management´s purchasing managers´ index report on a July surge in US services sector growth contrasted with a disappointing number on jobs growth last month from payroll firm ADP, with only 185,000 jobs added.
Traders are now focusing on Friday´s official US employment figures.
The Fed has said any rate hike, widely expected by September or December, was dependent on signs of a pick-up in the world´s top economy.
"Last night´s (PMI) report fell squarely into the category of incoming data releases that argue strongly in favour of September ´lift-off´," Ray Attrill, the global co-head of currency strategy in Sydney at National Australia Bank, said in a commentary.
In Tokyo, the dollar bought 124.75 yen, against 124.88 yen in New York Wednesday when it briefly crossed the 125 yen level, its highest since early June.
The euro stood at $1.0910 and 136.10 yen compared with $1.0904 and 136.18 yen in US trade.
On Wednesday, the Institute for Supply Management´s purchasing managers´ index report on a July surge in US services sector growth contrasted with a disappointing number on jobs growth last month from payroll firm ADP, with only 185,000 jobs added.
Traders are now focusing on Friday´s official US employment figures.
The Fed has said any rate hike, widely expected by September or December, was dependent on signs of a pick-up in the world´s top economy.
"Last night´s (PMI) report fell squarely into the category of incoming data releases that argue strongly in favour of September ´lift-off´," Ray Attrill, the global co-head of currency strategy in Sydney at National Australia Bank, said in a commentary.
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