The dollar was steady in Asian trade on Tuesday as worries about resurgent oil prices offset relief that major US banks' earnings were not as bad as feared, dealers said.
The US currency was little changed at 106.37 yen in Tokyo morning trade compared with 106.41 in New York late Monday.
The euro rose slightly to 1.5932 dollars from 1.5921 and to 169.46 yen from 169.42.
"I don't think the dollar will move much this week against the Japanese currency," said Masatsugu Miyata, forex dealer at Hachijuni Bank. "We don't see many factors to support the yen."
Traders returning to work in Tokyo after a long weekend opted to wait for fresh leads after a rebound in oil prices counter-balanced easing concern about problems in the US financial sector, dealers said.
"The direction of the dollar against the yen remains unclear," said Saburo Matsumoto, chief forex strategist at Sumitomo Trust Bank.
Dealers were monitoring trading in the euro against the yen.
"We're interested in watching when the yen will hit a new low" beyond 170 per euro, said Matsumoto.
The euro continued to be supported by the higher level of interest rates in the eurozone compared with those in the US and Japan because investors generally prefer currencies offering better yields, dealers said.
Overnight the greenback got a boost after Bank of America posted a quarterly profit well above expectations, further soothing jitters about US financial woes after last week's smaller-than-expected loss at Citigroup.
But gains in the dollar were short-lived as oil prices, which plunged more than 16 dollars a barrel in New York last week, surged higher as a tropical storm barrelled through the Gulf of Mexico, threatening oil installations.
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Dollar little changed in Asia
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