By Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - The dollar surged to a near 14-year high on Thursday, clocking up a string of milestones against other top world currencies and clobbering emerging markets.
Stronger data from the world's biggest economy underpinned the greenback's gains, which were further amplified by thinner volumes as U.S. traders stayed away for the Thanksgiving holiday. [FOX/]
The dollar pushed its way past more of last year's peaks against the euro
The yen
"There doesn't seem to be anything stopping U.S. yields going higher in the near-term so I think people are going to stay on the dollar trend," said Michael Metcalfe, head of global macro strategy at State Street Global Markets.
"The only risk to this are that the dislocations in markets outside of the U.S., particularly in emerging markets, get to a point where they start to feed back into concerns (for the Federal Reserve as it looks to raise interest rates)," he said.
In contrast to all the FX noise, European shares (FTEU3) saw a broadly quiet start, with most of the main bourses <0#.INDEXE> edging marginally higher on gains from chemical and insurance firms. (EU)
German business confidence data showed firms remained unfazed, for now at least, by the U.S. election win for Donald Trump and the political uncertainty currently bubbling in euro zone peers such as Italy.
However, the European Central Bank delivered an unusually downbeat message, warning that global political shifts could compound existing vulnerabilities to rising interest rates and revive worries about the euro zone's weaker sovereigns.
"This in turn could delay much-needed fiscal and structural reforms and could in a worst-case scenario reignite pressures on more vulnerable sovereigns," it added. "In particular, concerns about debt sustainability might re-emerge despite relatively benign financial market conditions."
EMERGING STRAINS
It was enough to keep bond markets playing the transatlantic divide that has been widening again on bets that, while the United States may be about to raise interest rates, Europe is unlikely to follow suit for a couple of years.
The yield on Germany's 10-year government bond, the benchmark for the region, fell 4.2 basis points to 0.24 percent, while Italy, which has been plagued by political concerns ahead of a referendum on constitutional reform, outperformed with yields down 7 basis points to 2.06 percent.
In the United States on Wednesday, the two-year government bond yield (US2YT=RR) hit its highest since April 2010.
The firm dollar kept most emerging market currencies on the ropes, with China's yuan nearing the 7 per dollar level for the first time since May 2008. [CNY/]
State banks or foreign exchange authorities in China, India, Indonesia and the Philippines were all suspected of intervening to slow the slide in their currencies traders said. Turkey's lira
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan (MIAPJ0000PUS) lost 0.4 percent, though the drop in the yen lifted the export-orientated Nikkei in Tokyo (N225) to a near 11-month high. (T)
Hong Kong's Hang Seng (HSI) shed 0.2 percent while higher metals prices lifted China's blue-chip CSI300 index <.CSI300> 0.4 percent.
Oil prices were little changed amid all the dollar commotion and ahead of a planned OPEC-led cut in crude production at a meeting on Nov. 30. [O/R]
U.S. crude was up 3 cents at $47.99 a barrel (CLc1) and Brent (LCOc1) was flat at $48.95.
Industrial metals remained red-hot on hopes of a revival in U.S. manufacturing and infrastructure spending under Trump. London zinc
"Strong durable goods orders in the U.S. helped buoy investors who have viewed Trump's upcoming presidency as a positive for industrial metals demand," said ANZ in a report.
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