91. Currency traders are waiting for the release of U.S. employment data due later today, which will provide clues for the direction of U.S. interest rates. 92. Currency traders at banks and other financial institutions who had bet on that possibility, based on publicly available information, did nothing illegal. 93. Currency traders bid up the yen on expectation that higher Japanese interest rates would increase demand for yen. 94. Currency traders doubt that the dollar has stopped falling. 95. Currency traders have interpreted his remarks to mean the U.S. feels the dollar is strong enough. 96. Currency traders responded to the report by bidding down the recently buoyant dollar. 97. Currency traders said they were finding shelter in strong currencies like the Swiss franc, German mark and United States dollar. 98. Currency traders were awaiting signs of progress in trade talks between the U.S. and Japan aimed at opening the Japanese auto market to U.S. goods. 99. Currency traders who got burned then have been wary of betting against the dollar ever since. 100. Currency traders, meanwhile, took a different approach. |
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