FOREX-Dollar holds upper hand after stellar U.S. jobs data

TOKYO, Aug 8 (Reuters) - The dollar strengthened against the yen on Monday, extending its gains after bumper U.S. job figures bolstered expectations of faster economic growth and raised the probability of a Federal Reserve interest rate increase this year.

Nonfarm payrolls rose by 255,000 jobs in July, way above economists' median forecast of an increase of 180,000 while payroll growth in June was also revised up to 292,000, with hiring broadly based across the sectors of the economy.

Against the yen, the dollar firmed to 102.13 yen, gaining 0.3 percent in early Monday trade and extending its slow recovery from Tuesday's three-week low of 100.68.

"The payrolls data puts markets on risk-on mode, making it difficult to buy the yen for now," said Yukio Ishizuki, currency strategist at Daiwa Securities.

The euro dropped to as low as $1.1046 on Friday, its lowest level in over a week. In early Asian trade it stood at $1.1091, flat from late U.S. levels last week.

The British pound dropped to $1.3021, its lowest since early July, and last traded at $1.3078.

The dollar's broad gains put its index against a basket of six major currencies as high as 96.522 on Friday, rising 1.6 percent from its five-week low of 95.003 touched on Tuesday. It last stood at 96.267.

Yet it is still less than halfway in its recovery from its fall from four-month high hit late last month of 97.569 because many investors think the Fed still has many hurdles to boost rates when the world economy looks fragile

Uncertainty from Brexit and a slowdown in China are among the risk factors that investors think are likely to keep the Fed cautious.

Fed funds rate futures are pricing in less than a 20 percent chance that the Fed will raise rates in its next policy meeting in September and less than a 50 percent chance even by the end of year.

"Markets think it will be difficult for the Fed to raise interest rates when many other countries in the world are looking to ease their monetary policies further," said Daiwa's Ishizuki.

Elsewhere, the Australian dollar held relatively firmer, staying near its peaks in recent months despite the Australian central bank's rate cut last week.

The Aussie stood little changed at $0.7616, not far from its three-week high of $0.7665 hit just before Friday's payrolls data.

A rise beyond its 10-week peak of $0.7676 touched on July 15 would push it to its highest level since early May.

Despite the latest rate cut by the Reserve Bank of Australia, the currency still has one of the highest interest rates among the developed world, attracting investors seeking to escape negative interest rates in Europe and Japan. (Editing by Sam Holmes)

08/07/2016 20:26

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