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GLOBAL MARKETS-Dollar slides to 17-month low vs yen as stocks, oil fall

Published 2016-04-05, 07:15 a/m
© Reuters.  GLOBAL MARKETS-Dollar slides to 17-month low vs yen as stocks, oil fall
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* Yen falls 0.8 pct vs yen as stocks and oil slide
* European shares led lower by German factory orders slide
* Oil drops on fall in U.S. gasoline demand
* German Bund yields back below 0.10 pct after factory data

By Nigel Stephenson
LONDON, April 5 (Reuters) - The dollar fell on Tuesday to
its weakest against the yen since October 2014 as investors
pulled away from riskier assets, pushing shares and oil prices
lower as the outlook for U.S. interest rates remained clouded.
The Japanese currency, often sought in times of market
turmoil or economic uncertainty, fell as low as 110.30 per
dollar JPY= as shares fell in Europe and Asia.
U.S. stocks also looked set open lower, according to index
futures ESc1 1YMc1 .
Oil, which fell in recent days on fading prospects of
agreement among producers to curb oversupply, took another hit
from data showing U.S. demand for gasoline declined in January
for the first time in 14 months.
Further muddying the waters for investors, two senior
officials of the U.S. Federal Reserve said the market's views of
when the central bank would raise interest rates may be too
"pessimistic".
Just a week ago, Fed Chair Janet Yellen said the Fed would
proceed cautiously in raising rates -- remarks viewed as dovish
and which drove U.S. stocks to 2016 highs.
The dollar fell 0.8 percent against the yen and last traded
at 110.37 yen. The euro EUR= fell 0.3 percent to $1.1354.
"Clearly risk sentiment is not good and oil prices are
declining this week and ... driving the dollar lower against the
yen," said Yujiro Goto, currency strategist at Nomura in London.
The Australian dollar AUD= fell with commodity prices and
dropped nearly 1 percent to $0.7533, having risen after the
Reserve Bank of Australia left interest rates unchanged, as
widely expected.
In stock markets, the FTSEurofirst 300 share index .FTEU3
dropped 1.8 percent. Germany's DAX index .GDAXI slid 2.3
percent after data showed German industrial orders unexpectedly
fell 2.1 percent in February due to weak foreign demand,
especially from euro zone countries.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan
.MIAPJ0000PUS was earlier down 1.7 percent. Japan's Nikkei
index .N225 fell 2.4 percent to an eight-week closing low.
Chinese shares bucked the trend, closing up 1.3 .CSI300 to
1.4 percent .SSEC as trading resumed after a market holiday.
Oil prices, down from above $100 a barrel since mid-2014 on
a global supply glut to a trough of $27.10 in late January, fell
again after the U.S. Energy Information Administration said on
Monday that gasoline demand fell 0.6 percent in January. Total
U.S. oil demand fell 1 percent compared with January 2015.

Brent crude LCOc1 traded 26 cents lower at $37.43 a
barrel, down from a 2016 high of $42.54 touched in mid-March.
"As long as most speculative money is long-positioned, there
is more room for closing positions and falling prices," said
Frank Klumpp, oil analyst at Stuttgart-based Landesbank
Baden-Wuerttemberg.

LOW-RISK
As stock prices tumbled, yields on low-risk government bonds
fell. German 10-year yields DE10YT=TWEB , the benchmark for
euro zone borrowing costs, fell as far as 0.08 percent, their
lowest in almost a year.
"The data signals weaker export growth, softer demand both
within the euro zone and abroad and thus suggesting that the
ECB's challenge as regards boosting inflation and inflation
expectations is and will remain very much an uphill battle,"
Rabobank strategist Matt Cairns said.
U.S. 10-year Treasury yields US10YT=RR fell nearly 6 basis
points to 1.72 percent, their lowest since March 1.
Gold, another perceived safe haven and a top-performing
asset in the first three months of 2016, rose 1.4 percent,
reversing losses of 1.4 percent chalked up in the last two days.
It traded at $1,231.40 an ounce.
Copper CMCU3 edged down 0.1 percent to $4,757.50 a tonne.

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