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* Dollar up on short-covering, kiwi down 1.4 pct
* IMM speculator dollar shorts reach biggest since July 2008
* Yen surge hits Japan shares, Nikkei slides 2.3 pct
* Dollar gains push down commodities, oil down $1
By Eric Burroughs
HONG KONG, Sept 14 (Reuters) - The dollar crawled up on Monday from a one-year low against other currencies as speculators booked profits on bets against the greenback, while the yen's surge threatened Japanese exporters and drove Tokyo shares down.
European indexes were set for a weaker start, with futures
on the Dow Jones Euro Stoxx 50
U.S. crude oil
Some analysts said Washington's decision to slap duties on Chinese tyre imports spooked investors, though others said there was limited impact. China condemned the move as protectionist. [ID:nN11470701]
The rebound in global stocks has prompted many portfolio managers to pull funds out of safe-haven dollar funds and shift it into equities, while the surge in gold has revived worries of consumer price inflation as a result of the Federal Reserve's ultra-loose policy.
Japan's Nikkei average <.N225> shed 2.3 percent as investors are fretting about how the yen's surge against the dollar will hurt exporters still reeling from the currency's record surge last year. A rising yen erodes the value of the earnings exporters make abroad.
"Japan will be hit by the stronger yen," said Masayoshi Yano, senior market analyst at Meiwa Securities in Tokyo.
Japanese exporters are likely to feel the pain of a stronger yen at levels below 95 to the dollar. The 95 level was roughly the average rate seen by large exporters in the Bank of Japan's last quarterly tankan survey for the business year to March.
Among exporters, computer and mobile phone maker NEC <6723.T> slumped 2.9 percent and was one of the biggest decliners in the Nikkei. Back in July, NEC said it has assumed a dollar rate of 90 yen for the current business year.
JAL FLYING
Bucking the trend, shares of Japan Airlines <9205.T> jumped
8 percent after sources said both American Airlines
Asian shares fell but fared better, with the MSCI index of
Asia-Pacific stocks outside Japan <.MIAPJ0000PUS> down 1.5
percent. On Friday the U.S. S&P 500 <.SPX> dipped just 0.1
percent, but S&P futures
Chinese shares <.SSEC> rose nearly 1 percent as investors that missed out on the listing of Metallurgical Corp of China put funds into the market, helping offset a drop in tyremakers. GITI Tire <600182.SS>, China's largest tyremaker, shed 5 percent.
The dollar index, a gauge of its performance agains six major currencies, rose 0.4 percent to 76.919 <.DXY>. Last week the dollar index tumbled 1.9 percent last week, the biggest weekly drop since May, and hit a one-year low of 76.457.
Because of the sharp drop in the past few weeks, some traders said the dollar was due for a short-term bounce.
"A rise in the dollar is nothing more than a technical rebound, and the greenback's downtrend is unchanged," said Hideki Hayashi, global economist at Mizuho Securities in Tokyo.
Data from the International Monetary Market on Friday showed speculators held a net dollar short position of $17.91 billion as of Sept. 8, the biggest since mid-July 2008 when the dollar hit a record low against the euro. [IMM/FX]
The dollar edged up 0.1 percent against the yen to 90.56
yen
Some market players were buying the dollar to protect option positions near 90 yen, traders sad, but on the charts the dollar was looking more likely to test the 14-year low of 87.10 yen touched in January.
The euro was down 0.4 percent at $1.4533
Higher-yielding currencies were harder hit. The Australian
dollar
New Zealand retail sales posted a surprise fall in July, reinforcing investor expectations that the central bank will keep rates on hold for a while longer. [ID:nSYD436580]
Government bonds pushed higher on the drop in stocks, but
gains were limited. The benchmark 10-year Japanese government
bond yield