LONDON (AFX) - The dollar rallied against the major currencies Thursday , extending gains for the year as expectations build U.S. jobs growth could top 200,000 in December.
"It's not just a correction anymore. There are now fresh, speculative flows supporting the U.S. dollar," said Peter Stoneham, managing currency analyst at Thomson IFR in London.
U.S. job figures, due out Friday, are forecast to show that nonfarm payrolls grew by 186,000 in December, beating the prior month's 112,000 -job gain.
The dollar rose 0.6 percent against the euro at $1.3191 and rose 0.7 percent on the British pound at $1.8722. The dollar traded at 104.88 yen, compared with 104.10 yen late Wednesday in the United States.
Masatoshi Nishi, chief manager of the treasury and securities division at Saitama Resona Bank in Tokyo, overnight said investors were buying of the dollar to pare their short positions, and the greenback could come under pressure as they take profits on these positions.
"That would pave the way for more dollar selling," he said.
U.S. trade Wednesday
The dollar hit its best level against the euro in three weeks before paring gains in U.S. trading Wednesday, amid heightened prospects that the U.S. Federal Reserve would continue to raise interest rates.
Currency traders said the inability of the dollar to extend its gains after an upbeat reading for a U.S. measure of the services economy could mean the dollar's three-day rally had gone too far without a pullback.
The Institute for Supply Management's nonmanufacturing index unexpectedly rose to 63.1 percent from 61.3 percent in November. This is the highest level since July.
The dollar's mostly technical-driven, early-year bounce from December's multiyear lows was accelerated by the release on Tuesday of minutes from the Fed's Dec. 14 policy meeting.
Currency analysts at Nomura Securities believe markets are interpreting the minutes as an indication that the Fed will not take a break in the tightening cycle. "Hence, depending on the incoming data, all meetings for the foreseeable future are likely to deliver 25 basis point rate hikes."
Higher U.S. rates could draw more foreign capital to U.S. markets, a prospect that pushed the euro to as low as $1.3213 earlier. One euro was worth $1.3255 in late trade, down 0.2 percent on the day.
The dollar gained initially against the Japanese yen, but turned negative. One dollar was worth 104.10 yen, a loss of 0.2 percent compared to where it stood in late U.S. trading Tuesday.
Short-term interest-rate futures contracts reflect increased expectations among investors that the Fed's current 2.25 percent target will be as high as 3.25 percent by the conclusion of the central bank's June meeting. Before, financial markets thought the Fed might pause in raising rates by the late spring.
Foreign capital inflows are seen as a key short-term offset to record U.S. trade and budget deficits, bringing relative stability to the economy and the dollar.
U.S. data, for the most part, continue to outshine results from the world's other economic heavyweights.
The eurozone purchasing managers' index for the services sector was unchanged at 52.6 in December.
The key indicator for currency markets has been the imbalance in the U.S. current account, a broad measure of trade that includes investment flows.
It stands at more than 5 percent of U.S. gross domestic product, the biggest share ever. The United States must draw enough foreign capital to finance this gap, which it has managed to do so far.
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