Dollar plunges on $150 oil forecast, surge in U.S. unemployment rate

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The dollar plunged Friday after Morgan Stanley said oil prices could rise to $150 and after data indicated the U.S. employment rate surged to 5.5% in May.

The dollar fell one cent versus the euro to $1.5694 and about three-quarters of a cent versus the British pound to $1.9640. The dollar also declined about one half-yen to 105.55 versus Japan's yen.

A Morgan Stanley report ended what had been a mild dollar rebound over the past week. Morgan Stanley said oil prices could rise to $150 per barrel, due to Asia's likely accelerating purchase of Middle East oil exports, Bloomberg News reported Friday. Oil surged $6.54 to $134.54 per barrel in early trading Friday, on top of Thursday's large $5.49 gain.

Also Friday, the U.S. Labor Department announced that the nation's unemployment rate surged to 5.5% in May from 5.0% in April, as U.S. companies continued to cut expenses to protect profits in the face of the economic slowdown.

So much for the (latest) dollar rally

Currency trader Andrew Resnick told BloggingStocks Friday the oil/unemployment double-whammy would be tough for a strong currency to withstand, let alone the fragile dollar.

"We were experiencing a modest dollar rally, and there were signs of strengthening dollar-bullish sentiment. The Fed may raise interest rates and oil prices up until a few days ago were trending lower on the belief global oil demand will drop off. But the dollar-bulls have been defeated again," Resnick said. He added that he was presently flat after being stopped out of dollar long positions in the euro-dollar and British pound-dollar currency pairings.

Further, Resnick said the Thursday/Friday events underscores how hard it is for the market to sustain a dollar rally in the face of dollar fundamentals that have remained decidedly negative for more than four years.

"It's the old problem of the terrible twins, the U.S. trade deficit and the federal budget deficit," Resnick said. "People had talked up the ability of the dollar to gain support on [Fed Chairman] Bernanke's interest rate pause, but the fundamentals laid waste to that sentiment again," Resnick said. "Until the deficit numbers show steady improvement, and the [U.S.] economy starts to grow, it's hard to see the dollar sustaining a rally. The economy is simply too weak right now."

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Last updated: February 10, 2010: 01:09 AM

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