Dollar edges down in Asia

Dunya News

The euro firmed to $1.3617 from $1.3606 and to 138.74 yen from 138.70 yen.

TOKYO, June 20, 2014 (AFP) - The dollar edged down in Asia Friday, extending losses in New York that were driven by dovish comments from the head of the US Federal Reserve that suggest interest rates will not go up until next year.

In midday Tokyo trade, the dollar bought 101.88 yen, down from 101.94 yen in New York on Thursday.

The euro firmed to $1.3617 from $1.3606 and to 138.74 yen from 138.70 yen.

The dollar began sliding after the Fed on Wednesday said it would further cut its stimulus programme and keep rates at record lows and made no mention that it would bring forward plans to tighten monetary policy.

Fed chief Janet Yellen said the economy was growing steadily and dismissed a fresh uptick in inflation as "noise" reflecting some short-term distortions.

This suggests that the Fed still sees a low-inflation environment for the next year or more.

Junya Tanase, chief foreign exchange strategist at J.P. Morgan, told Dow Jones Newswires that it was tough to see how the dollar-yen rate will "break outside the current range to show a clear trend, at least for near term".

Investors are also keeping an eye on the Iraq crisis after government troops recaptured a major refinery and the US said it was sending in military advisers to train local forces.