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2017-09-15 16:58 | Report Abuse
Navy vessels are moored in port at the U.S. Naval Base, Guam CREDIT: REUTERS
Julian Ryall
15 SEPTEMBER 2017 • 6:03AM
North Korea's launch of a ballistic missile that flew more than 2,300 miles before falling into the Pacific Ocean is a "clear and unequivocal" message to the United States that Pyongyang has the ability to strike Guam.
The distance from Pyongyang to Guam is a little over 2,100 miles and North Korea identified it as a target in early August, threatening to launch four Hwasong-12 intermediate-range ballistic missiles into waters close to the island.
The intention, according to analysts, was to demonstrate that Pyongyang would have no compunction in the event of war from targeting the resort island in order to interrupt air attacks on the North as well as efforts to reinforce ground forces on the Korean Peninsula.
2017-09-15 11:55 | Report Abuse
North Korea fires second ballistic missile over Japan
55 minutes ago
People in Seoul watch a news report about the missile launch (15 Sept 2017)Image copyrightAFP
North Korea has fired a ballistic missile across Japan, its second such provocative move in weeks.
South Korea's military said the missile reached an estimated altitude of about 770km (478 miles) and travelled 3,700km before landing in the sea off Hokkaido.
Japan's PM Shinzo Abe said his country would "never tolerate" North Korea's dangerous actions.
"If North Korea continues to walk down this path, it has no bright future," he said in a statement.
2017-09-15 11:52 | Report Abuse
North Korea fires second ballistic missile over Japan
50 minutes ago
People in Seoul watch a news report about the missile launch (15 Sept 2017)Image copyrightAFP
North Korea has fired a ballistic missile across Japan, its second such provocative move in weeks.
South Korea's military said the missile reached an estimated altitude of about 770km (478 miles) and travelled 3,700km before landing in the sea off Hokkaido.
Japan's PM Shinzo Abe said his country would "never tolerate" North Korea's dangerous actions.
"If North Korea continues to walk down this path, it has no bright future," he said in a statement.
2017-09-15 11:51 | Report Abuse
North Korea fires second ballistic missile over Japan
50 minutes ago
From the section Asia Share this with Facebook Share this with Twitter Share this with Messenger Share this with Email Share
People in Seoul watch a news report about the missile launch (15 Sept 2017)Image copyrightAFP
North Korea has fired a ballistic missile across Japan, its second such provocative move in weeks.
South Korea's military said the missile reached an estimated altitude of about 770km (478 miles) and travelled 3,700km before landing in the sea off Hokkaido.
Japan's PM Shinzo Abe said his country would "never tolerate" North Korea's dangerous actions.
"If North Korea continues to walk down this path, it has no bright future," he said in a statement.
2017-09-14 07:24 | Report Abuse
China Prepares Sale of $2 Billion in U.S.-Dollar Bonds
The government is preparing to sell $2 billion in bonds this month, and investment banks are pitching for a role in the deal, according to bankers in Hong Kong.
While the planned sale isn't large and is mostly symbolic, it would be China's biggest-ever U.S.-dollar bond sale and its first since October 2004, when the country raised a total of about $1.7 billion from selling dollar- and euro-denominated bonds that matured in five and 10 years.
China's Ministry of Finance didn't immediately respond to requests for comment.
China has about $200 million in outstanding U.S.-dollar sovereign-debt issues that it is scheduled to pay off in 2027 and 2096, and those bonds yield about 3.3% and 4% respectively, according to research firm CreditSights. The country issued several global bonds in the 1990s, including a 100-year $100 million bond in 1996 with a 9% coupon.
2017-09-14 07:21 | Report Abuse
China Prepares Sale of $2 Billion in U.S.-Dollar Bonds
The government is preparing to sell $2 billion in bonds this month, and investment banks are pitching for a role in the deal, according to bankers in Hong Kong.
While the planned sale isn't large and is mostly symbolic, it would be China's biggest-ever U.S.-dollar bond sale and its first since October 2004, when the country raised a total of about $1.7 billion from selling dollar- and euro-denominated bonds that matured in five and 10 years.
China's Ministry of Finance didn't immediately respond to requests for comment.
China has about $200 million in outstanding U.S.-dollar sovereign-debt issues that it is scheduled to pay off in 2027 and 2096, and those bonds yield about 3.3% and 4% respectively, according to research firm CreditSights. The country issued several global bonds in the 1990s, including a 100-year $100 million bond in 1996 with a 9% coupon.
2017-09-14 07:20 | Report Abuse
China Prepares Sale of $2 Billion in U.S.-Dollar Bonds
The government is preparing to sell $2 billion in bonds this month, and investment banks are pitching for a role in the deal, according to bankers in Hong Kong.
While the planned sale isn't large and is mostly symbolic, it would be China's biggest-ever U.S.-dollar bond sale and its first since October 2004, when the country raised a total of about $1.7 billion from selling dollar- and euro-denominated bonds that matured in five and 10 years.
China's Ministry of Finance didn't immediately respond to requests for comment.
China has about $200 million in outstanding U.S.-dollar sovereign-debt issues that it is scheduled to pay off in 2027 and 2096, and those bonds yield about 3.3% and 4% respectively, according to research firm CreditSights. The country issued several global bonds in the 1990s, including a 100-year $100 million bond in 1996 with a 9% coupon.
2017-09-14 07:10 | Report Abuse
Brent up warded $55/barrel and above.
2017-09-14 07:08 | Report Abuse
Brent upward to $55 and above.
2017-09-13 23:43 | Report Abuse
KUALA LUMPUR: The ringgit is expected to continue to strengthen against the US dollar, with an economist predicting it may even hit RM4 to a US dollar at the end of the year.
The optimism is based on the good growth in trade and the gross domestic product (GDP). The economy achieved a 5.8% growth in April-June.
The Malaysian Reserve quoted Sunway University Business School economics Professor Dr Yeah Kim Leng as saying: “The ringgit has been trading higher these days due to the above-expectations performance of Malaysia’s economy, including the growth in trade and GDP.
“Since we have already reached RM4.19 in early September, I would say that it is possible for the ringgit to reach around RM4.10 to RM4 in December.”
2017-09-13 23:42 | Report Abuse
KUALA LUMPUR: The ringgit is expected to continue to strengthen against the US dollar, with an economist predicting it may even hit RM4 to a US dollar at the end of the year.
The optimism is based on the good growth in trade and the gross domestic product (GDP). The economy achieved a 5.8% growth in April-June.
The Malaysian Reserve quoted Sunway University Business School economics Professor Dr Yeah Kim Leng as saying: “The ringgit has been trading higher these days due to the above-expectations performance of Malaysia’s economy, including the growth in trade and GDP.
“Since we have already reached RM4.19 in early September, I would say that it is possible for the ringgit to reach around RM4.10 to RM4 in December.”
2017-09-13 23:41 | Report Abuse
KUALA LUMPUR: The ringgit is expected to continue to strengthen against the US dollar, with an economist predicting it may even hit RM4 to a US dollar at the end of the year.
The optimism is based on the good growth in trade and the gross domestic product (GDP). The economy achieved a 5.8% growth in April-June.
The Malaysian Reserve quoted Sunway University Business School economics Professor Dr Yeah Kim Leng as saying: “The ringgit has been trading higher these days due to the above-expectations performance of Malaysia’s economy, including the growth in trade and GDP.
“Since we have already reached RM4.19 in early September, I would say that it is possible for the ringgit to reach around RM4.10 to RM4 in December.”
2017-09-12 10:59 | Report Abuse
image: http://www.thestar.com.my/~/media/online/2016/12/19/02/14/ringgit-dec15.ashx/?w=620&h=413&crop=1&hash=E7F62D61716F93AE1B19E58FB7073315790FFC9B
KUALA LUMPUR: AmInvestment Research is maintaining its positive view on the ringgit due to six factors which include the stronger economic growth, healthy inflow of foreign funds into the equities market and easing inflation pressure.
It said on Tuesday its positive outlook was firstly, the better-than-expected 1Q and 2Q GDP growth of 5.5% and 5.8%.
The higher GDP growth has prompted it to revise upwards its full year 2017 GDP to between 5.7% and 5.9% supported by strong exports and complement with domestic activities;
Secondly, it also noted the healthy inflow of funds into the equity market with net inflow year-to-date around RM10.7bil after registering net outflow for three consecutive years while foreign holdings in Malaysian Government Securities (MGS) at 40.32% which is equivalent to RM150.9bil.
Thirdly, it expects inflation pressure to ease in 2H2017 to average around 3.0%-3.3% from 4.1% in 1H2017 bringing the full year average to around 3.5%-3.7% as a result of lower cost push pressures with a more stable fuel price.
Fourthly, the research house envisages the current negative real returns could potentially fade away with the Overnight Policy Rate expected to stay unchanged at 3% as inflation pressure eases.
“Still we maintain a 45% chance for a rate hike by 25bps in 4Q2017 should demand pull inflation picks up strongly while supporting GDP,” it said.
Fifthly, the onshore sentiments on the ringgit has improved supported with strong external reserves which has surpassed the US$100bil mark, now is at US$100.5bil.
As for the sixth factor, it expects the continued weakening pressure on the US dollar index (DXY) index due to the ongoing sentiments in the US. We expect the DXY index to be around 90-91 in 2017.
The DXY is an index (or measure) of the value of the dollar relative to a basket of foreign currencies.
“From our estimates, it shows more room for the ringgit to strengthen. Our fair value for the ringgit is around 3.95 against the US$. However, our year-end target for ringgit is 4.12 while our full year average is 4.31.to 4.33,” it said.
Read more at http://www.thestar.com.my/business/business-news/2017/09/12/aminvestment-research-positive-on-ringgit/#EkGfT9D409C5XpSc.99
2017-09-12 10:58 | Report Abuse
image: http://www.thestar.com.my/~/media/online/2016/12/19/02/14/ringgit-dec15.ashx/?w=620&h=413&crop=1&hash=E7F62D61716F93AE1B19E58FB7073315790FFC9B
KUALA LUMPUR: AmInvestment Research is maintaining its positive view on the ringgit due to six factors which include the stronger economic growth, healthy inflow of foreign funds into the equities market and easing inflation pressure.
It said on Tuesday its positive outlook was firstly, the better-than-expected 1Q and 2Q GDP growth of 5.5% and 5.8%.
The higher GDP growth has prompted it to revise upwards its full year 2017 GDP to between 5.7% and 5.9% supported by strong exports and complement with domestic activities;
Secondly, it also noted the healthy inflow of funds into the equity market with net inflow year-to-date around RM10.7bil after registering net outflow for three consecutive years while foreign holdings in Malaysian Government Securities (MGS) at 40.32% which is equivalent to RM150.9bil.
Thirdly, it expects inflation pressure to ease in 2H2017 to average around 3.0%-3.3% from 4.1% in 1H2017 bringing the full year average to around 3.5%-3.7% as a result of lower cost push pressures with a more stable fuel price.
Fourthly, the research house envisages the current negative real returns could potentially fade away with the Overnight Policy Rate expected to stay unchanged at 3% as inflation pressure eases.
“Still we maintain a 45% chance for a rate hike by 25bps in 4Q2017 should demand pull inflation picks up strongly while supporting GDP,” it said.
Fifthly, the onshore sentiments on the ringgit has improved supported with strong external reserves which has surpassed the US$100bil mark, now is at US$100.5bil.
As for the sixth factor, it expects the continued weakening pressure on the US dollar index (DXY) index due to the ongoing sentiments in the US. We expect the DXY index to be around 90-91 in 2017.
The DXY is an index (or measure) of the value of the dollar relative to a basket of foreign currencies.
“From our estimates, it shows more room for the ringgit to strengthen. Our fair value for the ringgit is around 3.95 against the US$. However, our year-end target for ringgit is 4.12 while our full year average is 4.31.to 4.33,” it said.
Read more at http://www.thestar.com.my/business/business-news/2017/09/12/aminvestment-research-positive-on-ringgit/#EkGfT9D409C5XpSc.99
2017-09-07 21:36 | Report Abuse
Brent uptrend to $34/barrel and above.
2017-09-02 19:41 | Report Abuse
Heard people said there will be bullish in klse stocks before general election.
2017-09-02 14:49 | Report Abuse
THE EXPRESS TRIBUNE > BUSINESS
US dollar losing its lustre
NEW YORK: In times of uncertainty or crisis, investors typically take refuge in safe options like the Swiss franc, gold or the US dollar, but under President Donald Trump the greenback has lost its lustre, especially to the euro. After this week’s North Korean missile launch over Japan raised fears it could trigger a major conflict, the single European currency rose above the symbolic threshold of $1.2 for the first time since January 2015. “The dollar and US Treasuries are typically safe haven assets. But no one really wants to own the dollar right now,” said Brad Bechtel, head of foreign exchange trading at Jefferies. US monetary policy also plays a role in the dollar’s relative value as do comments – or the absence thereof – from central bankers.
2017-09-02 14:48 | Report Abuse
THE EXPRESS TRIBUNE > BUSINESS
US dollar losing its lustre
NEW YORK: In times of uncertainty or crisis, investors typically take refuge in safe options like the Swiss franc, gold or the US dollar, but under President Donald Trump the greenback has lost its lustre, especially to the euro. After this week’s North Korean missile launch over Japan raised fears it could trigger a major conflict, the single European currency rose above the symbolic threshold of $1.2 for the first time since January 2015. “The dollar and US Treasuries are typically safe haven assets. But no one really wants to own the dollar right now,” said Brad Bechtel, head of foreign exchange trading at Jefferies. US monetary policy also plays a role in the dollar’s relative value as do comments – or the absence thereof – from central bankers.
2017-08-31 20:56 | Report Abuse
ENVIRONMENT & HEALTH HONG KONG
Another tropical cyclone brewing in S.China Sea to bring more wet weather to Hong Kong this weekend
31 August 2017 13:05 Karen Cheung2 min read
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Another tropical cyclone may bring more unstable weather to Hong Kong over the weekend, just a week after two back-to-back storms caused strong winds, flooding, and transport havoc across the city.
2017-08-31 20:56 | Report Abuse
ENVIRONMENT & HEALTH HONG KONG
Another tropical cyclone brewing in S.China Sea to bring more wet weather to Hong Kong this weekend
31 August 2017 13:05 Karen Cheung2 min read
FBTwitterFlattrRedditDonate
Another tropical cyclone may bring more unstable weather to Hong Kong over the weekend, just a week after two back-to-back storms caused strong winds, flooding, and transport havoc across the city.
2017-08-29 23:27 | Report Abuse
This will likely continue to run as an issue for the markets in the background but certainly is one further reason for caution in being exposed to the US dollar versus the core G10 currencies like the yen, euro and Swiss franc.
In addition, the debt ceiling deadline at the end of September and the government shutdown risks will continue to weigh on the dollar over the short-term.
2017-08-29 23:25 | Report Abuse
This will likely continue to run as an issue for the markets in the background but certainly is one further reason for caution in being exposed to the US dollar versus the core G10 currencies like the yen, euro and Swiss franc.
In addition, the debt ceiling deadline at the end of September and the government shutdown risks will continue to weigh on the dollar over the short-term.
2017-08-29 10:31 | Report Abuse
Dollar falls to 4-month low vs yen after N.Korea fires missile
Dollar dropped to a four-month low against the yen
The greenback had been on the back foot after Fed Chair Janet Yellen's Jackson Hole speech made no mention of monetary policy
2017-08-29 10:29 | Report Abuse
Dollar falls to 4-month low vs yen after N.Korea fires missile
Dollar dropped to a four-month low against the yen
The greenback had been on the back foot after Fed Chair Janet Yellen's Jackson Hole speech made no mention of monetary policy
2017-08-29 07:50 | Report Abuse
The Moment Of Truth For The U.S. Dollar
Summary
The fall since January.
Consolidation, a dead cat bounce, and building cause for a technical breakdown.
The euro could be heading a lot higher.
The dollar is starting to impact commodity prices.
The downside target for the world’s reserve currency.
2017-08-29 07:49 | Report Abuse
The Moment Of Truth For The U.S. Dollar
A
Summary
The fall since January.
Consolidation, a dead cat bounce, and building cause for a technical breakdown.
The euro could be heading a lot higher.
The dollar is starting to impact commodity prices.
The downside target for the world’s reserve currency.
2017-08-28 20:24 | Report Abuse
US Dollar Index depressed near 92.50
By Pablo Piovano
The US Dollar Index – which tracks the greenback vs. its main rivals – remains under pressure at the beginning of the week, now trading in the 92.40 area, near YTD lows.
US Dollar offered post-Yellen
The index has managed to rebound from fresh yearly lows near 92.30 recorded at the very beginning of the Asian session today, although it remains fragile following the innocuous speech by Chief J.Yellen at the Jackson Hole Symposium on Friday.
Expectations of a Fed’s move on rates later in the year appear to be declining among investors, hurting both DXY and yields in the US money markets. In fact, yields of the US 10-year reference are now attempting a rebound above the 2.17% level after bottoming out near 2.16% on Friday.
In addition, another round of the Trump-NAFTA conflict seems to have buried any optimism regarding the future of the tax reform and extra fiscal stimulus via infrastructure spending, all weighing on the buck and keeping USD-bulls at bay.
Data wise today, wholesale inventories, July’s goods trade balance and the Dallas Fed manufacturing index are all due later in the NA session.
US Dollar relevant levels
As of writing the index is losing 0.01% at 92.51 and a breakdown of 92.31 (2017 low Aug.28) would open the door to 91.91 (2016 low May 3) and then 91.51 (low Jan.15 2015). On the flip side, the next up barrier aligns at 93.25 (10-day sma) followed by 93.44 (high Aug.25) and finally 94.14 (high Aug.16).
2017-08-28 20:23 | Report Abuse
US Dollar Index depressed near 92.50
By Pablo Piovano
The US Dollar Index – which tracks the greenback vs. its main rivals – remains under pressure at the beginning of the week, now trading in the 92.40 area, near YTD lows.
US Dollar offered post-Yellen
The index has managed to rebound from fresh yearly lows near 92.30 recorded at the very beginning of the Asian session today, although it remains fragile following the innocuous speech by Chief J.Yellen at the Jackson Hole Symposium on Friday.
Expectations of a Fed’s move on rates later in the year appear to be declining among investors, hurting both DXY and yields in the US money markets. In fact, yields of the US 10-year reference are now attempting a rebound above the 2.17% level after bottoming out near 2.16% on Friday.
In addition, another round of the Trump-NAFTA conflict seems to have buried any optimism regarding the future of the tax reform and extra fiscal stimulus via infrastructure spending, all weighing on the buck and keeping USD-bulls at bay.
Data wise today, wholesale inventories, July’s goods trade balance and the Dallas Fed manufacturing index are all due later in the NA session.
US Dollar relevant levels
As of writing the index is losing 0.01% at 92.51 and a breakdown of 92.31 (2017 low Aug.28) would open the door to 91.91 (2016 low May 3) and then 91.51 (low Jan.15 2015). On the flip side, the next up barrier aligns at 93.25 (10-day sma) followed by 93.44 (high Aug.25) and finally 94.14 (high Aug.16).
2017-08-28 20:22 | Report Abuse
US Dollar Index depressed near 92.50
By Pablo Piovano
The US Dollar Index – which tracks the greenback vs. its main rivals – remains under pressure at the beginning of the week, now trading in the 92.40 area, near YTD lows.
US Dollar offered post-Yellen
The index has managed to rebound from fresh yearly lows near 92.30 recorded at the very beginning of the Asian session today, although it remains fragile following the innocuous speech by Chief J.Yellen at the Jackson Hole Symposium on Friday.
Expectations of a Fed’s move on rates later in the year appear to be declining among investors, hurting both DXY and yields in the US money markets. In fact, yields of the US 10-year reference are now attempting a rebound above the 2.17% level after bottoming out near 2.16% on Friday.
In addition, another round of the Trump-NAFTA conflict seems to have buried any optimism regarding the future of the tax reform and extra fiscal stimulus via infrastructure spending, all weighing on the buck and keeping USD-bulls at bay.
Data wise today, wholesale inventories, July’s goods trade balance and the Dallas Fed manufacturing index are all due later in the NA session.
US Dollar relevant levels
As of writing the index is losing 0.01% at 92.51 and a breakdown of 92.31 (2017 low Aug.28) would open the door to 91.91 (2016 low May 3) and then 91.51 (low Jan.15 2015). On the flip side, the next up barrier aligns at 93.25 (10-day sma) followed by 93.44 (high Aug.25) and finally 94.14 (high Aug.16).
2017-08-28 18:10 | Report Abuse
China claims victory over India in Himalayan border row
16 minutes ago
From the section Asia Share this with Facebook Share this with Twitter Share this with Messenger Share this with Email Share
Indian soldier along China borderImage copyrightAFP
Image caption
An Indian soldier on the China border - Beijing has reiterated what it says is its right to territory
China says India has withdrawn troops from a disputed Himalayan border area, ending a tense stand-off lasting weeks.
The foreign ministry in Beijing said it was pleased that "trespassing Indian personnel have all pulled back to the Indian side of the boundary".
India's foreign ministry confirmed troops were "disengaging" at Doklam after agreement between the countries.
The row began in mid-June when India said it opposed a Chinese attempt to extend a border road on the plateau.
The area is known as Doklam in India and Donglang in China.
2017-08-28 18:10 | Report Abuse
China claims victory over India in Himalayan border row
16 minutes ago
From the section Asia Share this with Facebook Share this with Twitter Share this with Messenger Share this with Email Share
Indian soldier along China borderImage copyrightAFP
Image caption
An Indian soldier on the China border - Beijing has reiterated what it says is its right to territory
China says India has withdrawn troops from a disputed Himalayan border area, ending a tense stand-off lasting weeks.
The foreign ministry in Beijing said it was pleased that "trespassing Indian personnel have all pulled back to the Indian side of the boundary".
India's foreign ministry confirmed troops were "disengaging" at Doklam after agreement between the countries.
The row began in mid-June when India said it opposed a Chinese attempt to extend a border road on the plateau.
The area is known as Doklam in India and Donglang in China.
2017-08-28 10:47 | Report Abuse
A combination of events put pressure on the U.S. Dollar last week, culminating with speeches by Fed Chair Janet Yellen and European Central Bank President Mario Draghi on Friday.
September U.S. Dollar Index futures settled the week at 92.677, down -0.682 or -0.73%.
U.S. Dollar Index
Weekly September U.S. Dollar Index
More
The week started with the dollar under pressure amid geopolitical tension in North Korea, as investors braced for the annual central bankers’ symposium at Jackson Hole, Wyoming. South Korean and U.S. forces began computer-simulated military exercises on Monday in the wake of North Korea’s weapons programs, angering the Asian communist regime. North Korea denounced the exercises as preparations for a nuclear war.
The dollar bounced higher about mid-week after the Euro was pressured by a weaker-than-expected reading on German investor confidence. Position-squaring ahead of the Jackson Hole symposium also supported the dollar.
The Greenback was also pressured during the week after U.S. President Donald Trump suggested a shutdown of the government was possible and threatened to terminate the North American Free Trade Agreement.
The U.S. Dollar was supported late in the week on increased speculation Republicans and Trump were getting closer to announcing their tax reform plan. President Trump’s chief economic advisor Gary Cohn said the President will start publicly campaigning for highly-anticipated tax reform next week. Cohn told the Financial Times that Trump will begin calling for long-awaited reform next Wednesday when he visits Missouri.
Finally, the week ended with the dollar index plunging in reaction to a surge in the Euro. The EUR/USD rallied to a two-year high after European Central Bank President Mario Draghi mentioned nothing about concerns over a high-priced Euro. Dovish comments from Fed Chair Janet Yellen also contributed to the dollar’s weakness.
2017-08-28 10:45 | Report Abuse
A combination of events put pressure on the U.S. Dollar last week, culminating with speeches by Fed Chair Janet Yellen and European Central Bank President Mario Draghi on Friday.
September U.S. Dollar Index futures settled the week at 92.677, down -0.682 or -0.73%.
U.S. Dollar Index
Weekly September U.S. Dollar Index
More
The week started with the dollar under pressure amid geopolitical tension in North Korea, as investors braced for the annual central bankers’ symposium at Jackson Hole, Wyoming. South Korean and U.S. forces began computer-simulated military exercises on Monday in the wake of North Korea’s weapons programs, angering the Asian communist regime. North Korea denounced the exercises as preparations for a nuclear war.
The dollar bounced higher about mid-week after the Euro was pressured by a weaker-than-expected reading on German investor confidence. Position-squaring ahead of the Jackson Hole symposium also supported the dollar.
The Greenback was also pressured during the week after U.S. President Donald Trump suggested a shutdown of the government was possible and threatened to terminate the North American Free Trade Agreement.
The U.S. Dollar was supported late in the week on increased speculation Republicans and Trump were getting closer to announcing their tax reform plan. President Trump’s chief economic advisor Gary Cohn said the President will start publicly campaigning for highly-anticipated tax reform next week. Cohn told the Financial Times that Trump will begin calling for long-awaited reform next Wednesday when he visits Missouri.
Finally, the week ended with the dollar index plunging in reaction to a surge in the Euro. The EUR/USD rallied to a two-year high after European Central Bank President Mario Draghi mentioned nothing about concerns over a high-priced Euro. Dovish comments from Fed Chair Janet Yellen also contributed to the dollar’s weakness.
2017-08-28 10:42 | Report Abuse
A dealer said US Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen’s speech at the Jackson Hole Economic Policy Symposium last week did not provide any clue on the US’s monetary policy outlook.
Meanwhile, it was reported that Hurricane Harvey, which hit southeast Texas, would likely pressure the US dollar further, as damage from the storm may threaten the US economy. Texas's Gulf Coast is home to key oil and gas facilities that make up nearly a third of the US's refinery capability.
2017-08-28 10:41 | Report Abuse
A dealer said US Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen’s speech at the Jackson Hole Economic Policy Symposium last week did not provide any clue on the US’s monetary policy outlook.
Meanwhile, it was reported that Hurricane Harvey, which hit southeast Texas, would likely pressure the US dollar further, as damage from the storm may threaten the US economy. Texas's Gulf Coast is home to key oil and gas facilities that make up nearly a third of the US's refinery capability.
2017-08-28 10:39 | Report Abuse
At 0635 AEST on Monday, the Australian dollar was worth 79.24 US cents, up from 79.04 US cents on Friday. Westpac’s Imre Speizer said the US dollar, along with bond yields fell following the annual central bankers meeting.
“The eagerly awaited Jackson Hole speeches from (Federal Reserve chair Janet) Yellen and (European Central Bank president Mario) Draghi contained little on monetary policy, disappointing those looking for clues on outlook. The US dollar and bond yields fell,” he said in a Monday morning note.
“The US dollar index closed down 0.6 per cent on the day, to the lowest level since May 2016.” On Monday the Australian dollar would likely stay within the 78.65 to 79.65 US cent range “with a slight upward bias”.
The local currency is lower against the yen and the euro.
2017-08-28 10:39 | Report Abuse
At 0635 AEST on Monday, the Australian dollar was worth 79.24 US cents, up from 79.04 US cents on Friday. Westpac’s Imre Speizer said the US dollar, along with bond yields fell following the annual central bankers meeting.
“The eagerly awaited Jackson Hole speeches from (Federal Reserve chair Janet) Yellen and (European Central Bank president Mario) Draghi contained little on monetary policy, disappointing those looking for clues on outlook. The US dollar and bond yields fell,” he said in a Monday morning note.
“The US dollar index closed down 0.6 per cent on the day, to the lowest level since May 2016.” On Monday the Australian dollar would likely stay within the 78.65 to 79.65 US cent range “with a slight upward bias”.
The local currency is lower against the yen and the euro.
2017-08-25 23:43 | Report Abuse
Us dollar index fall to 92.78.
2017-08-24 16:47 | Report Abuse
Currencies will depreciate
Geopolitical strains could also weaken the Korean won (Exchange: KRW=) and the Taiwan dollar (Exchange: TWD=).
Financial markets in those countries have a large number of foreign equity investors, and those traders tend to sell shares in the wake of political tensions, explained Khoon Goh, head of Asia research at Australian bank ANZ.
When those stock markets take a beating, so do their currencies. If that's the case, Goh predicts the won will fall to 1180 per dollar from 1130 presently, and the Taiwan dollar to hit 31.6 from current levels of 30.2.
But the safe-haven Japanese yen (CME:Index and Options Market: ZJP*) would likely benefit amid the overall risk-averse mood, Goh added.
2017-08-24 16:07 | Report Abuse
The U.S. dollar weakened on Wednesday as investors reduced exposure in higher-yielding assets after U.S. President Trump’s threat of a government shutdown and comments about the possible termination of a North American trade agreement.
In a speech In Phoenix, Arizona, late Tuesday, Trump warned he might terminate the NAFTA trade treaty with Mexico and Canada after a three-day conference failed to settle deep differences. He also stated that he may shut down the government if he does not get funding for a wall on the U.S. –Mexico border.
Trading conditions were thin as investors awaited speeches from Fed Chair Janet Yellen and European Central Bank President Mario Draghi on Friday in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Therefore, the market may have over-reacted to Trump’s comments. No one can be certain whether Trump was trying to publicly negotiate changes to the current treaty, or if he was actually serious about ending NAFTA completely.
Forex
Investors didn’t waste time trying to determine whether Trump’s comments were a negotiation ploy or a real threat. They moved money into the Japanese Yen for protection. This move weighed on the U.S. Dollar.
The EUR/USD also rose after the release of strong German and French PMI survey readings.
Essentially, the dollar remained under pressure because the buying was too thin to mount an intraday counter-trend move.
U.S. Economic News
Disappointing U.S. economic data also pressured the U.S. Dollar. Flash Manufacturing PMI came in below expectations at 52.5. Analysts were looking for a reading of 53.4. Flash Services PMI data, however, exceeded expectations. New Home Sales were ugly, coming in at 571K, well below the 611K forecast.
In other news, Dallas Federal Reserve President Robert Kaplan said on Wednesday that high levels of debt in the United States represent an impediment to future growth.
During a Q&A session at the Permian Basis Petroleum Association Membership luncheon in Midland, Texas, the FOMC member also said he wants to be patient and wait for more data before raising argument for removing some monetary accommodation from the economy.
2017-08-24 16:05 | Report Abuse
The U.S. dollar weakened on Wednesday as investors reduced exposure in higher-yielding assets after U.S. President Trump’s threat of a government shutdown and comments about the possible termination of a North American trade agreement.
In a speech In Phoenix, Arizona, late Tuesday, Trump warned he might terminate the NAFTA trade treaty with Mexico and Canada after a three-day conference failed to settle deep differences. He also stated that he may shut down the government if he does not get funding for a wall on the U.S. –Mexico border.
Trading conditions were thin as investors awaited speeches from Fed Chair Janet Yellen and European Central Bank President Mario Draghi on Friday in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Therefore, the market may have over-reacted to Trump’s comments. No one can be certain whether Trump was trying to publicly negotiate changes to the current treaty, or if he was actually serious about ending NAFTA completely.
Forex
Investors didn’t waste time trying to determine whether Trump’s comments were a negotiation ploy or a real threat. They moved money into the Japanese Yen for protection. This move weighed on the U.S. Dollar.
The EUR/USD also rose after the release of strong German and French PMI survey readings.
Essentially, the dollar remained under pressure because the buying was too thin to mount an intraday counter-trend move.
U.S. Economic News
Disappointing U.S. economic data also pressured the U.S. Dollar. Flash Manufacturing PMI came in below expectations at 52.5. Analysts were looking for a reading of 53.4. Flash Services PMI data, however, exceeded expectations. New Home Sales were ugly, coming in at 571K, well below the 611K forecast.
In other news, Dallas Federal Reserve President Robert Kaplan said on Wednesday that high levels of debt in the United States represent an impediment to future growth.
During a Q&A session at the Permian Basis Petroleum Association Membership luncheon in Midland, Texas, the FOMC member also said he wants to be patient and wait for more data before raising argument for removing some monetary accommodation from the economy.
2017-08-24 16:05 | Report Abuse
The U.S. dollar weakened on Wednesday as investors reduced exposure in higher-yielding assets after U.S. President Trump’s threat of a government shutdown and comments about the possible termination of a North American trade agreement.
In a speech In Phoenix, Arizona, late Tuesday, Trump warned he might terminate the NAFTA trade treaty with Mexico and Canada after a three-day conference failed to settle deep differences. He also stated that he may shut down the government if he does not get funding for a wall on the U.S. –Mexico border.
Trading conditions were thin as investors awaited speeches from Fed Chair Janet Yellen and European Central Bank President Mario Draghi on Friday in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Therefore, the market may have over-reacted to Trump’s comments. No one can be certain whether Trump was trying to publicly negotiate changes to the current treaty, or if he was actually serious about ending NAFTA completely.
Forex
Investors didn’t waste time trying to determine whether Trump’s comments were a negotiation ploy or a real threat. They moved money into the Japanese Yen for protection. This move weighed on the U.S. Dollar.
The EUR/USD also rose after the release of strong German and French PMI survey readings.
Essentially, the dollar remained under pressure because the buying was too thin to mount an intraday counter-trend move.
U.S. Economic News
Disappointing U.S. economic data also pressured the U.S. Dollar. Flash Manufacturing PMI came in below expectations at 52.5. Analysts were looking for a reading of 53.4. Flash Services PMI data, however, exceeded expectations. New Home Sales were ugly, coming in at 571K, well below the 611K forecast.
In other news, Dallas Federal Reserve President Robert Kaplan said on Wednesday that high levels of debt in the United States represent an impediment to future growth.
During a Q&A session at the Permian Basis Petroleum Association Membership luncheon in Midland, Texas, the FOMC member also said he wants to be patient and wait for more data before raising argument for removing some monetary accommodation from the economy.
2017-08-22 20:25 | Report Abuse
News » Business » International Business News » Malaysia's c.bank reserves rise to $100.4 bln as of Aug 15
Malaysia's c.bank reserves rise to $100.4 bln as of Aug 15
Reuters | Aug 22, 2017, 12:34 PM IST
KUALA LUMPUR, Aug 22 (Reuters) - Malaysia's gross international reserves rose to $100.4 billion as of Aug. 15, from $99.4 billion on July 31, the central bank said on Tuesday. Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) said reserves were sufficient to finance 7.9 months of retained imports and were 1.1 times the short-term external debt. The central bank released the following international reserves data, expressed in billions of dollars: Aug 15 July 31 July 14 June 30 Total gross 100.4 99.4 99.1 98.9 international reserves Foreign currency 93.9 93.0 92.4 92.5 reserves IMF reserves position 0.8 0.8 0.8 0.8 SDRs 1.2 1.1 1.1 1.1 Gold 1.5 1.5 1.5 1.5 Other reserve assets 3.0 3.0 3.3 3.0 ($1 = 4.2800 ringgit) (Reporting by Emily Chow; Editing by Amrutha Gayathri)
2017-08-22 20:22 | Report Abuse
BNM’s international reserves now at US$100.4 billion
Tuesday August 22, 2017
03:34 PM GMT+8
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A woman walks pass the headquarters of Bank Negara Malaysia in Kuala Lumpur, March 30, 2015. — Picture by Yusof Mat Isa
A woman walks pass the headquarters of Bank Negara Malaysia in Kuala Lumpur, March 30, 2015. — Picture by Yusof Mat Isa
KUALA LUMPUR, Aug 22 — Bank Negara Malaysia’s (BNM) international reserves amounted to US$100.4 billion (RM431.0 billion) as at August 15, 2017, compared with US$99.4 billion registered as at July 31, 2017.
2017-08-22 20:22 | Report Abuse
BNM’s international reserves now at US$100.4 billion
Tuesday August 22, 2017
03:34 PM GMT+8
ICYMI
Malaysian fans slammed over ‘Singapore dogs’ football chantMalaysian fans slammed over ‘Singapore dogs’ football chant
Ambank and RHB merger unlikely to happen, say sourcesAmbank and RHB merger unlikely to happen, say sources
Indonesia police declare jailed cleric suspect in 2016 Jakarta attackIndonesia police declare jailed cleric suspect in 2016 Jakarta attack
The Edit: Inside Taiwan’s tribal matchmaking festivalThe Edit: Inside Taiwan’s tribal matchmaking festival
ADVERTISEMENT
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INCREASE TEXT DECREASE TEXT RESET TEXT PRINT ARTICLE
A woman walks pass the headquarters of Bank Negara Malaysia in Kuala Lumpur, March 30, 2015. — Picture by Yusof Mat Isa
A woman walks pass the headquarters of Bank Negara Malaysia in Kuala Lumpur, March 30, 2015. — Picture by Yusof Mat Isa
KUALA LUMPUR, Aug 22 — Bank Negara Malaysia’s (BNM) international reserves amounted to US$100.4 billion (RM431.0 billion) as at August 15, 2017, compared with US$99.4 billion registered as at July 31, 2017.
Stock: [TECHNAX]: TECHNA-X BERHAD
2017-09-15 16:59 | Report Abuse
Navy vessels are moored in port at the U.S. Naval Base, Guam CREDIT: REUTERS
Julian Ryall
15 SEPTEMBER 2017 • 6:03AM
North Korea's launch of a ballistic missile that flew more than 2,300 miles before falling into the Pacific Ocean is a "clear and unequivocal" message to the United States that Pyongyang has the ability to strike Guam.
The distance from Pyongyang to Guam is a little over 2,100 miles and North Korea identified it as a target in early August, threatening to launch four Hwasong-12 intermediate-range ballistic missiles into waters close to the island.
The intention, according to analysts, was to demonstrate that Pyongyang would have no compunction in the event of war from targeting the resort island in order to interrupt air attacks on the North as well as efforts to reinforce ground forces on the Korean Peninsula.