Dollar declines, gold gains

Employees of a foreign exchange trading company work near monitors showing U.S. President Trump, and the Japanese yen's exchange rate against the U.S. dollar in Tokyo

Employees of a foreign exchange trading company work near monitors showing U.S. President Trump, and the Japanese yen's exchange rate against the U.S. dollar in Tokyo

Published Jan 23, 2017

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Sydney - The dollar slumped after Donald Trump in his

first days in office offered little news on his plans to boost growth

while stirring concerns over protectionism. Metals and Asian shares outside of

Japan rose.

The US currency fell against its major peers and gold

added to a four-week advance. Japan’s Topix index fell on the strengthening yen

as Asian traders reacted for the first time to Trump’s

inauguration. Shares in mainland China and Taiwan climbed. Copper paced

gains among industrial metals as the US president reiterated plans to

rebuild infrastructure.

Trump began work as US president after saying he’d place

American interests at the forefront of his agenda. His pro-growth

campaign-trail pronouncements helped drive a rally in equities since November,

while the dollar surged and bonds slumped. Some of those trades are unwinding

this month as investors assess whether those moves had pushed prices too far,

too fast. Money managers will be dissecting earnings from some of the world’s

largest companies this week with Alphabet Inc., Samsung Electronics Co. and

Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. all reporting results.

“Markets are now waiting for more evidence that Donald

Trump will deliver on fiscal stimulus and deregulation,” said Shane Oliver,

Sydney-based global investment strategist at AMP Capital Investor, which

manages about $120 billion. “Shares remain vulnerable to a further correction

or consolidation in the next month or so.”

Here are the main

moves in markets:

Currencies

The yen rose 1.1 percent to 113.33 per dollar as of 3:04

p.m. in Tokyo. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index slid 0.6 percent. It has fallen

for four straight weeks, its longest retreat since February. The dollar lost

0.7 percent against the South African rand and 0.8 percent versus the Mexican

peso. 

Commodities

Gold rose 0.5 percent to $1,216.62 an ounce. The metal

has increased in 10 of the past 11 sessions. West-Texas Intermediate crude oil

was down 0.1 percent at $53.20. Copper futures jumped 1.5 percent in London and

aluminum added 0.8 percent to the highest since May 2015. Lead and zinc rose at

least 1.1 percent after Trump reiterated plans to rebuild U.S. infrastructure.

Iron ore dropped 2.1 percent, bringing its four-day decline to almost 5

percent. Iron ore is headed for a sharp decline as higher-grade supplies from

Brazil and Australia are set to increase, according to Citigroup Inc.

Stocks

The Shanghai Composite rose 0.3 percent, while the Hang

Seng index was little changed, paring an intraday advance of 0.8 percent.

Taiwan’s Taiex index climbed 1 percent. Japan’s Topix Index lost 1.2 percent,

its first decline in four days, led by exporters. India’s S&P BSE Sensex

increased 0.4 percent, rebounding from Friday’s 1 percent drop. Australia’s

S&P/ASX 200 Index fell 0.8 percent, after sliding 1.2 percent last

week. The gauge reached the highest since May 2015 earlier this month. Contracts

on the S&P 500 Index declined 0.3 percent Monday after the gauge advanced

0.3 percent on Friday.

Bonds

10-year Treasury yields declined 3 basis points to 2.441

percent. The yield on 10-year Australian government bonds lost 3 basis points

to 2.76 percent.

BLOOMBERG

 

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