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BLBG: Yen Declines as Sugimoto Says Currency Gains May Hurt Economy
 
The yen fell against the dollar and the euro after Japanese Vice Finance Minister Kazuyuki Sugimoto said “excessive moves” in currencies may hurt the economy.

The yen dropped the most against the Australian dollar and South African rand as Sugimoto told reporters in Tokyo today that bolstering the economy is now the government’s “top priority.” The euro dropped versus the dollar after European Central Bank council member Axel Weber warned against “exaggerating” recent signals the economy is stabilizing. India’s rupee climbed the most in two decades on optimism Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s election victory will help his party implement reforms.

“Sugimoto said that volatility in the foreign-exchange markets was undesirable, which indicates that the yen is probably at too high a level at the moment,” said Emeric Challier, who manages about $92 million in currencies and fixed- income assets at Avenir Finance Investment Managers in Paris.

The yen weakened to 95.73 per dollar as of 7:08 a.m. in New York, from 95.21 last week, paring its gain this month to 3.1 percent. It depreciated to 128.90 per euro, from 128.43. The euro slid to $1.3466, from $1.3495.

The yen gained 11 percent versus the dollar since the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. last September as investors bought the Japanese currency as a refuge from the financial turmoil.

‘Negative Effect’

“Excessive moves in currencies are undesirable as they would have a negative effect on the Japanese economy,” Sugimoto said today. “We’ll continue to monitor currency markets.”

The yen extended declines after Japan’s local and foreign- currency debt ratings were brought to the same level, Aa2, by Moody’s Investors Service, to reflect that the repayment risk for each is equal.

ECB council member Weber said the central bank has done enough to help the economy and shouldn’t consider further measures unless things get a lot worse, the Financial Times Deutschland reported, citing an interview.

“The crisis has yet to reach the people via job losses,” the newspaper quoted him as saying. “Calling an end to the crisis too early is very risky. People will be disappointed and that could have an enormous impact on confidence.”

Investors raised bets the ECB will cut its 1 percent benchmark at its next meeting on June 4. The implied yield on the three-month Euribor futures contract for June delivery fell to 1.115 percent today, from 1.175 percent a week ago, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The central bank announced a plan on May 7 to buy 60 billion euros ($80.6 billion) of covered bonds to help keep borrowing costs down.

Rupee Gains

The rupee jumped to 47.9425 per dollar, from 49.3950 last week, after touching 47.7800, the strongest since Dec. 26, after Singh’s ruling Congress party won its most seats since 1991, enabling the party to start forming a new government today without the support of communist lawmakers.

“Congress now has a free hand to pursue economic and market reforms,” currency strategists at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc wrote in a report today. “It will encourage foreign investment inflows and help allay earlier fears of a sharp increase in budget deficit. It’s positive news for the rupee and Indian equities.”

The British pound advanced to $1.5196, from $1.5180, and to 88.58 pence per euro, from 88.93 pence.

Investors from Millennium Asset Management to Mellon Capital Management Corp. are betting the pound’s losses are coming to an end. Sterling’s 20 percent drop in the past year made Britain the first choice when Schroders Plc started buying real estate in Europe last month.

“Weaker sterling makes U.K. property more attractive,” said Neil Turner, the Wiesbaden, Germany-based executive in charge of the money manager’s new 300 million-euro property fund. “The U.K. property market is a screaming buy compared to rivals in continental Europe.”

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