What! The dollar's headed for a loss?

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What! The dollars headed for a loss?

New York - The US currency is headed for its biggest monthly loss since June after the Federal Reserve raised its target from near zero on December 16.

By Bloomberg

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Published: Sat 26 Dec 2015, 11:00 PM

Last updated: Sun 27 Dec 2015, 8:16 AM

The dollar's in a funk.
The US currency is headed for its biggest monthly loss since June after the Federal Reserve raised its target from near zero on December 16 and underscored that it'll proceed gradually with additional interest-rate increases.
The message from the Fed, combined with European Central Bank stimulus measures that were less robust than some investors anticipated, have led dollar bulls to retreat. Large speculators such as hedge funds trimmed futures bets on greenback gains the past three weeks, Commodity Futures Trading Commission data show.
"The expectation is that we're not going to see aggressive tightening and that's really impacting the dollar - that's what we're going to see" going into year-end, said Sireen Harajli, a currency strategist at Mizuho Bank in New York.
The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index, which tracks the US currency against 10 major peers, has lost 0.9 per cent this month. The greenback is down 3.7 per cent at $1.0971 per euro and 2.3 per cent to ¥120.32 as of Friday in Tokyo.
The index had surged about nine per cent this year through November as investors anticipated that the Fed would tighten policy while counterparts in Europe and Japan carry out unprecedented stimulus.
Yet investors are looking past the Fed's liftoff and contemplating a landscape of low US interest rates for years to come. Traders expect about two Fed rate increases in 2016, futures indicate. That's short of the four boosts that Fed projections indicate.
Hedge funds reduced net futures positions that profit from gains in the dollar versus a basket of eight currencies to 322,224 contracts as of December 15, the smallest in about a month, according to CFTC data.
"There is still some year-end rebalancing for many large portfolio managers away from the dollar," said Matt Weller, an analyst at Gain Capital Holdings' Forex.com unit in Grand Rapids, Michigan. "That could be a headwind for the next couple of weeks."


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