“The Aussie fell off a cliff yesterday so we’re seeing a bit of a recovery, but things are still fragile,” said Joseph Capurso, a currency strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia in Sydney. “The risk to the market is that you get a bigger than 15,000 payrolls increase tonight so that pushes the U.S. dollar up and the risk currencies lower.”
Australia’s currency rose 0.7 percent to 77.56 yen as of 4:57 p.m. in Sydney, trimming its weekly decline to 2.8 percent. It yesterday touched 76.23 yen, the lowest since July 22. The currency bought 86.62 U.S. cents from 86.46 cents yesterday and is set to drop for a fourth week, the longest stretch of declines in a year.
New Zealand’s dollar rose to 61.64 yen from 61.20 yen yesterday, and down from 63.28 yen on Jan. 29 in New York. It bought 68.85 U.S. cents from 68.73 cents, set for a 1.8 percent weekly decline.
Commonwealth Bank
Commonwealth Bank of Australia today lowered its forecast for the Australian dollar saying it will peak at 88 cents in the second quarter before ending the year at 85 cents. The Aussie’s second-most accurate forecaster in 2009 had previously expected a peak of 98 cents with the currency trading at 90 cents by December, according to Bloomberg data. It also said today that New Zealand’s dollar will probably trade at 70 cents through the first half of the year before ending 2010 at 71 cents.
Australia’s dollar also gained today after a report showed the nation’s building industry expanded in January at the fastest pace in two years amid rising demand for apartment, engineering and commercial construction.
Source:businessweek.com/
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