(MENAFN - DailyFX) The US Dollar declined as stocks pushed higher in Asian trade, sapping demand for the safety-linked currency. More of the same looks likely ahead as European equity index futures push higher ahead of the opening bell.
Key Overnight Developments
US Dollar Broadly Sold as Asian Stocks Follow Wall Street Higher
Australia Posts First Trade Surplus in Two Years as Exports Surge
Japans Corporate Spending, Profits Disappoint in the First Quarter
Critical Levels

The Euro and the British Pound rose against the US Dollar in overnight trading, adding 0.3 and 0.2 percent respectively as stocks followed Wall Street higher across Asian exchanges, sapping demand for the safety-linked greenback. We remain short EURUSD.
Asia Session Highlights

Australias Trade Balance unexpectedly posted the first surplus in a year in April as exports surged 10.7 percent from March, marking the biggest monthly increase in two years as robust Chinese demand pushed overseas sales of metal ores and minerals higher by a hefty 25 percent. The outlook going forward seems far from rosy however as China proactively moves to slow economic growth amid fears of asset bubbles and runaway inflation. Indeed, RBA governor Glenn Stevens alluded to as much earlier this week as the central bank kept rates on hold and signaled an end to its tightening campaign, saying economic growth in Asia may need to moderate in the year ahead.
Japanese Capital Spending fell 11.5 percent in the year through the first quarter, disappointing economists expectations for a narrower 9.6 percent decline. In quarterly terms, spending fell 2.6 percent, nearly tripling the 0.9 percent decline in the three months through December 2009. Corporate profits also proved lackluster, growing 10.9 percent as compared to an average gain of 34.8 percent over the previous three quarters. The outcome underscores cues noted in last weeks release of Aprils labor market figures, hinting that firms are becoming reluctant about future demand amid concerns of a slowdown in China, the hitherto engine of a boom in overseas sales that had lifted the worlds second largest economy out of the worst recession since World War II in the second quarter of last year.
Euro Session: What to Expect

Risk sentiment looks likely to set the tone for currency markets in the coming session, with the US Dollar and Japanese Yen positioned to decline against the spectrum of their major counterparts as European equity index futures soar 2.3 percent ahead of the opening bell, sapping demand for the safety-linked currencies amid a broad-based recovery in risk appetite.
UK House Prices are expected to add 0.3 percent in May according to a survey from the Nationwide Building Society. In annual terms, prices are set to rise 9.6 percent, down from the previous months 10.5 percent increas