Is this a strong enough catalyst to force the shorts to cover ?
Dollar gets strong lift from surprise jobs dataNEW YORK - The dollar gained momentum Friday after a report showing a
dramatic improvement in the US labor market prompted traders to rethink their outlook for growth and interest rates in the United States.
The euro fell to 1.4852 dollars at 2200 GMT from 1.5045 late Thursday in New York.
The dollar meanwhile rose to 90.47 yen, from 88.30.
The jobs data cheered investors who saw it as
possibly heralding an employment-expanding US recovery. The dollar has lately tended to weaken on positive US economic news, which can encourage investors to seek out currencies -- such as the euro -- seen as riskier than the greenback.
But Friday's data appeared to change the outlook of traders, serving to boost the greenback.
The report "suggests that
the US economy is not doing nearly as bad as everyone had feared," said Kathy Lien at Global Forex Trading.
Lien said the report raised the possibility that the Federal Reserve would push up interest rates from the near-zero level, since the central bank normally avoids rate hikes until unemployment peaks.
"Up until this point, no respectable economist would consider that rates would move anywhere until the second quarter at the earliest," she said.
"However, if a continued easing in unemployment indicates that we have indeed passed the peak, history has shown that the Fed is inclined to start raising rates."
Analysts were busy revising their outlook for when the Fed might hike rates and how quickly.
"The dollar posted its sharpest advance since June," said Scott Marcouiller of Wells Fargo Advisors.
"The gain in the greenback came as an improving jobs picture suggested the Federal Reserve might lift interest rates sooner rather than later."
Michael Malpede at Easy Forex noted that "a more rapid improvement in the US labor market outlook could make it harder for the Fed to justify maintaining low yields for an 'extended period.'"
The US Labor Department reported that the number of lost jobs fell to 11,000 in November from 111,000 in October, with the unemployment rate dipping from 10.2 percent to 10.0 percent of the work force.
The report showed the labor market moving close to positive territory, suggesting the economy is nearing job growth needed to sustain a fragile recovery.
At City Index, analyst Joshua Raymond said
the "nonfarm payrolls number is quite incredible and it's a massive shock to the markets, but a fantastic one nonetheless."
"The market had been expecting a decline of 130,000 but the fact that the decline was just 11,000 also suggests that maybe investors have been too conservative with their recovery aspirations and perhaps the economic picture is much better than we are currently anticipating," he added.
In late New York trade, the dollar stood at 1.0160 Swiss francs from 1.0013 Thursday.
The pound was at 1.6456 dollars after 1.6532.
Source: AFP /ls
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