* Dollar drops to lowest since Japan intervened last week
* Dollar index falls below 80 <.DXY>, lowest in six months
* Euro at 5-mth high vs dlr, Swiss franc at 2-1/2 year peak
* Next euro target around $1.3465 - technical analysts
(Adds technical levels; updates prices)
By Anirban Nag
LONDON, Sept 22 (Reuters) - The dollar fell on Wednesday to
its lowest level versus the yen since Japan intervened last
week, with the dollar index hitting a six-month trough after the
Federal Reserve raised expectations of more monetary easing.
The euro <EUR=> vaulted option barriers at $1.3350 to a
five-month high just shy of $1.3400 as investors including a
large U.S. investment bank sold the greenback and piled into the
single currency.
But the market was wary about selling the dollar against the
yen too aggressively, anxious it might trigger another wave of
intervention by the Japanese authorities that wrong-footed many
investors, including hedge funds, last week.
"The Fed has lowered the bar for more quantitative easing
and the market is just following the path of least resistance in
selling the dollar," said Paul Mackel, director of currency
strategy at HSBC Markets.
"Having said that, sellers of dollar/yen will have to be
very nimble as intervention risks are very high. We would expect
the Japanese to intervene once the price action gets too
one-sided."
By 1106 GMT, the dollar was down 0.5 percent against the yen
at 84.61, well off last week's high of 85.93 yen <JPY=>. It fell
as far as 84.53 yen, still around 1.5 yen higher than a 15-year
low of 82.87 set last Wednesday just before Japanese authorities
intervened to send it three yen higher in a day.
Many traders expect Japan to step in between 83.00 and 85.00
yen. They said the authorities had called banks to ask if they
will be staffed on Thursday, a Japanese national holiday, in an
apparent attempt to keep traders cautious over intervention.
"I think they will intervene if the dollar falls to 84 yen
or below," said Tom Levinson, FX strategist at ING. "Dollar/yen
is pretty sensitive to the fall in U.S. yields, so it looks like
pressure will be back on the Japanese authorities to intervene."
Last week, Japan intervened minutes after the dollar fell
below 83 yen, its first intervention since 2004.
<^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
For a PDF on the yen click: http://r.reuters.com/fac44p
Insider link: http://link.reuters.com/mum84p
Insider link: http://link.reuters.com/jab74p
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>
Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan kept investors nervous by
telling the Financial Times intervention was 'unavoidable' if
there was drastic change in the currency. []
RACE TO THE BOTTOM
The dollar index <.DXY><=USD>, a measure of its performance
against a basket of six currencies, fell 0.7 percent to 79.861,
its lowest since mid-March.
The drop in the index came after the Fed expressed greater
concern about sluggish U.S. growth and low levels of inflation
in a statement that many took as opening the door wider to
pumping more dollars into the economy. []
A fall in U.S. Treasury yields compounded the dollar's
problems, with short-dated yields at record lows after the Fed
statement, making U.S. debt less attractive to Japanese
investors. []
The euro rose 1 percent versus the dollar after climbing 1.5
percent on Tuesday, helped by buying from Middle Eastern central
banks, traders said. It closed above its 200-day moving average
on Tuesday, pointing to more gains on the charts.
Technical analysts said the next target was around $1.3465,
the 38.2 pct retracement from the 2008 high of $1.6038 the high
in 2008, to June's low of $1.1875. Further out was $1.3500, the
50 pct retracement of the Nov 2009 high of $1.5145 to the June
low.
The euro was also supported as Portugal's bond auction saw
strong demand [], a day after investors lapped up
debt issuance from Greece, Spain and Ireland.
The dollar fell against the Swiss franc <CHF=> to 0.9872,
its lowest since April 2008. The greenback also fell sharply
against the Canadian and New Zealand dollars.
(Additional reporting by Tamawa Desai; Editing by Hugh Lawson)