Jan. 17 (Bloomberg) -- The yen and dollar weakened against most of their major counterparts after China’s gross domestic product expanded more than economists estimated and as advances in Asian stocks reduced the appeal of haven currencies.
The Australian dollar climbed versus 15 of its 16 major peers on prospects demand for the nation’s commodities will be sustained in China, Australia’s biggest export market. The yen retreated from near an 11-year high against the euro before U.S. data today projected to show manufacturing in the New York region expanded in January at the fastest pace in eight months. Singapore’s dollar strengthened after a report showed the city state’s exports unexpectedly gained in December.
“The stronger-than-expected China GDP helped boost risk sentiment in the markets a little bit,” said Minoru Shioiri, chief manager of foreign-exchange trading Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities Co. in Tokyo. “Risk assets such as the Aussie dollar and stocks are higher, while the dollar and yen are being sold.”
The yen depreciated 0.4 percent to 97.64 per euro as of 2:13 p.m. in Tokyo after rising to 97.04 yesterday, the strongest level since December 2000. The dollar lost 0.5 percent to $1.2728 per euro, breaking a two-day gain. The greenback was little changed at 76.72 yen. U.S. markets were closed yesterday for a holiday.
China’s economy expanded 8.9 percent in the three months ended Dec. 31 from a year earlier, the statistics bureau said today. Economists in a Bloomberg News survey had estimated an 8.7 percent gain.
‘Hard Landing’
The Australian dollar climbed 0.6 percent to $1.0378 and reached $1.0398, the strongest since Nov. 9. The so-called Aussie appreciated 0.1 percent to 81.54 euro cents, after earlier touching a record high of 81.64. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index of shares rose 1.2 percent, boosting the allure of higher- yielding currencies.
Today’s GDP report “certainly allays fears that China is going to see a hard landing and that is generally seen as a positive for the world,” said Jonathan Cavenagh, a currency strategist at Westpac Banking Corp. in Singapore. “It’s hard to get too downbeat in the near term” about the Australian and New Zealand dollars.
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s general economic index rose to 11 this month, the highest since May, according to economist projections before the data. Readings higher than zero signal expansion.
Declines in the yen and dollar were limited before the European Financial Stability Facility, Spain and Greece sell bills today amid concern rating cuts by Standard & Poor’s will sap demand for European debt.
EFSF Downgrade
S&P yesterday removed the AAA rating for the EFSF, which is designed to fund rescue packages for Greece, Ireland and Portugal, after reducing the top grades of France and Austria by one level on Jan. 13. The company also downgraded Italy, Portugal and Spain.
The euro area’s bailout fund is scheduled to sell 1.5 billion euros ($1.9 billion) of bills. Greece will also offer bills, while Spain will auction securities maturing in 364 and 518 days.
“You can’t help becoming fairly pessimistic about the euro,” said Marito Ueda, senior managing director in Tokyo at FX Prime Corp., a currency margin company. “The EFSF’s downgrade limits options available for European leaders to overcome the sovereign crisis, and poor results at today’s auction are likely to lead to euro selling.”
The common currency has lost 4.2 percent over the past six months, according to the Bloomberg Correlation-Weighted Indexes. The yen has risen 9.3 percent, the best performance among the 10 currencies tracked by the gauges, while the dollar has advanced 7.4 percent.
Greek Talks
Greece will resume talks tomorrow with the Institute of International Finance, which represents private creditors, Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos has said. The Washington- based IIF broke off talks last week after failing to agree with the government about how much money investors will lose by swapping their bonds.
“Greece will default very shortly because even the debt exchange that has been proposed is a default by our definition,” Moritz Kraemer, S&P’s managing director of European sovereign ratings, said yesterday in an interview with Bloomberg Television. “It’s a distressed exchange.”
A German index of investor and analyst confidence in the economic outlook was minus 49.4 in January, according to a Bloomberg News survey of economists before the ZEW Center for European Economic Research releases the data today. While it would be an improvement from minus 53.8 in December, the gauge would be below zero for an eighth month.
Singapore’s dollar advanced 0.4 percent to S$1.2861 versus its U.S. counterpart after non-oil domestic exports jumped 9 percent last month from a year earlier, compared with the median forecast in a Bloomberg survey for a 1.2 percent decrease. A surge in pharmaceutical overseas sales offset a slump in electronics shipments.
(businessweek.com)
Showing posts with label euro. Show all posts
Showing posts with label euro. Show all posts
Monday, 16 January 2012
WRAPUP 2-S&P downgrades euro zone rescue fund, Greece pressured
BRUSSELS, Jan 17 (Reuters) - U.S. rating agency Standard & Poor's cut its credit rating of the euro zone's EFSF rescue fund on Monday, and Greece was under pressure to break a deadlock in debt swap talks if it is to avoid an unruly default.
French Finance Minister Francois Baroin said there was no need to shore up the European Financial Stability Facility after S&P downgraded it by one notch to AA+ from triple-A, echoing the view of Germany, the only major euro zone member to retain a top-notch credit rating.
S&P said in a statement the decision was all but inevitable following identical cuts three days earlier to the creditworthiness of France and Austria, two of the EFSF's guarantors.
"We consider that credit enhancements that would offset what we view as the now-reduced creditworthiness of the EFSF's guarantors and securities backing the EFSF's issues are currently not in place," the agency said in a statement.
"We have therefore lowered to AA+ the issuer credit rating of the EFSF, as well as the issue ratings on its long-term debt securities."
Financial markets, which had fallen after the mass downgrades of euro zone members on Friday, showed little reaction to the latest blow -- which had been expected -- and Japan, a major buyer of EFSF bonds, said they remained an "attractive" investment.
A growing number of experts, including a Standard & Poor's official, warned that a Greek default was on the cards, after Greece's talks with creditors broke down on Friday.
Greece was under growing pressure to secure a last-ditch agreement with its private creditors to accept voluntary losses on their holdings of Greek bonds.
Athens risks going bankrupt when 14.5 billion euros of bond redemptions fall due in late March. Without a private sector bond swap involving a voluntary writedown, a 130 billion euro second international bailout for Greece could fall apart.
The talks with creditor banks broke down because of different views on what interest rate is acceptable, the head of the group leading private sector talks said.
Charles Dallara, managing director of the Institute of International Financial, said the banks were "very surprised" at the stance taken by some officials representing both governments and multilateral institutions, without naming them.
The EFSF was set up by the 17 governments that share the European single currency in May 2010 and has so far been used to provide emergency loans to Ireland and Portugal. It is also expected to contribute to a second bailout of Greece.
The fund has an effective lending capacity of 440 billion euros, which depends on guarantees, mainly from the euro zone's AAA countries, only four of which now remain: Germany, Luxembourg, Finland and the Netherlands.
LENDING CAPACITY UNAFFECTED
In a statement, the EFSF said the downgrade would not affect its lending capacity, and emphasised that its short-term rating remained at S&P's top level.
"The downgrade to 'AA+' by only one credit agency will not reduce EFSF's lending capacity of 440 billion euros," said the fund's chief executive, Klaus Regling.
"EFSF has sufficient means to fulfill its commitments under current and potential future adjustment programmes until the ESM becomes operational in July 2012," he added.
The ESM -- the European Stability Mechanism -- is a permanent rescue fund that is expected to have an effective capacity of 500 billion euros, based on paid-in capital of 80 billion euros and callable capital of 620 billion euros.
French Finance Minister Francois Baroin said there was no need to shore up the EFSF despite the S&P rating downgrade.
"The EFSF has kept intact its ability to lend, with enough means and guarantees to fulfil the full range of its present and future commitments," he said in a statement. "There is therefore no need to act on the EFSF at the moment."
German Chancellor Angela Merkel's spokesman, Steffen Seibert told reporters: "The government has no reason to believe that the volume of guarantees that the EFSF has now should not be sufficient to fulfill its current obligations.
"We should not forget that it has been decided to significantly move forward the ESM and to have it in place in mid-2012, one year earlier than planned."
There was also support from Japan, with Finance Minister Jun Azumi saying Tokyo's trust in EFSF bonds, in which it has so far invested 21 billion euros, had not been shaken.
"Japan has bought them by certain amounts and our stance will not immediately change just because of the downgrade," Azumi told reporters after a cabinet meeting.
The euro hovered just above a 17-month trough against the dollar early in Asia on Tuesday, but reaction to the S&P downgrade was muted. Trading overnight was subdued as U.S. markets were shut for the Martin Luther King holiday.
The head of Austria's debt office told Reuters the loss of Vienna's AAA status had also been priced into the market already, and Austria was able to sell treasury bills on Monday at rates very close to zero.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy brushed off the historic loss of Paris' top credit rating for the first time since 1975, a blow to his campaign for re-election in May, saying France's policy would not be dictated by rating agencies.
Contrasting S&P's move with a statement by rival watchdog Moody's, which still has France on an Aaa rating, he said: "My deep belief is that it changes nothing. We must reduce the deficit, we must reduce our spending and we must improve the competitiveness of our economy to return to a path of growth."
LOSERS TO PAY?
Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti, whose debt-laden country was downgraded by two notches along with Spain, called last week during a visit to Berlin for the EFSF to be increased to ward off attacks on his country's bonds.
But a senior politician in Merkel's conservative CDU party, Michael Meister, said it was the downgraded countries that should increase their guarantees for the fund.
"Germany was not downgraded so our contribution should not be changed. Countries that were affected must contribute more to the guarantees," Meister told Reuters.
Sources familiar with Greece's talks with its private creditors said EU paymaster Germany was pressing for new bonds to be given to banks in the planned swap to carry a low coupon of less than four percent that would increase the banks' effective losses to 75 percent.
The IMF was also weighing on the talks by warning that the Greek economy and the euro zone's economic outlook have worsened since the bailout package was agreed in October, raising Athens' funding needs to make its debt sustainable by 2020, they said.
Greece put a brave face on the standoff. "There is a little pause in these discussions," Greek Prime Minister Lucas Papademos told CNBC television. "But I am confident they will continue and we will reach an agreement that is mutually acceptable in time."
French Finance Minister Francois Baroin said there was no need to shore up the European Financial Stability Facility after S&P downgraded it by one notch to AA+ from triple-A, echoing the view of Germany, the only major euro zone member to retain a top-notch credit rating.
S&P said in a statement the decision was all but inevitable following identical cuts three days earlier to the creditworthiness of France and Austria, two of the EFSF's guarantors.
"We consider that credit enhancements that would offset what we view as the now-reduced creditworthiness of the EFSF's guarantors and securities backing the EFSF's issues are currently not in place," the agency said in a statement.
"We have therefore lowered to AA+ the issuer credit rating of the EFSF, as well as the issue ratings on its long-term debt securities."
Financial markets, which had fallen after the mass downgrades of euro zone members on Friday, showed little reaction to the latest blow -- which had been expected -- and Japan, a major buyer of EFSF bonds, said they remained an "attractive" investment.
A growing number of experts, including a Standard & Poor's official, warned that a Greek default was on the cards, after Greece's talks with creditors broke down on Friday.
Greece was under growing pressure to secure a last-ditch agreement with its private creditors to accept voluntary losses on their holdings of Greek bonds.
Athens risks going bankrupt when 14.5 billion euros of bond redemptions fall due in late March. Without a private sector bond swap involving a voluntary writedown, a 130 billion euro second international bailout for Greece could fall apart.
The talks with creditor banks broke down because of different views on what interest rate is acceptable, the head of the group leading private sector talks said.
Charles Dallara, managing director of the Institute of International Financial, said the banks were "very surprised" at the stance taken by some officials representing both governments and multilateral institutions, without naming them.
The EFSF was set up by the 17 governments that share the European single currency in May 2010 and has so far been used to provide emergency loans to Ireland and Portugal. It is also expected to contribute to a second bailout of Greece.
The fund has an effective lending capacity of 440 billion euros, which depends on guarantees, mainly from the euro zone's AAA countries, only four of which now remain: Germany, Luxembourg, Finland and the Netherlands.
LENDING CAPACITY UNAFFECTED
In a statement, the EFSF said the downgrade would not affect its lending capacity, and emphasised that its short-term rating remained at S&P's top level.
"The downgrade to 'AA+' by only one credit agency will not reduce EFSF's lending capacity of 440 billion euros," said the fund's chief executive, Klaus Regling.
"EFSF has sufficient means to fulfill its commitments under current and potential future adjustment programmes until the ESM becomes operational in July 2012," he added.
The ESM -- the European Stability Mechanism -- is a permanent rescue fund that is expected to have an effective capacity of 500 billion euros, based on paid-in capital of 80 billion euros and callable capital of 620 billion euros.
French Finance Minister Francois Baroin said there was no need to shore up the EFSF despite the S&P rating downgrade.
"The EFSF has kept intact its ability to lend, with enough means and guarantees to fulfil the full range of its present and future commitments," he said in a statement. "There is therefore no need to act on the EFSF at the moment."
German Chancellor Angela Merkel's spokesman, Steffen Seibert told reporters: "The government has no reason to believe that the volume of guarantees that the EFSF has now should not be sufficient to fulfill its current obligations.
"We should not forget that it has been decided to significantly move forward the ESM and to have it in place in mid-2012, one year earlier than planned."
There was also support from Japan, with Finance Minister Jun Azumi saying Tokyo's trust in EFSF bonds, in which it has so far invested 21 billion euros, had not been shaken.
"Japan has bought them by certain amounts and our stance will not immediately change just because of the downgrade," Azumi told reporters after a cabinet meeting.
The euro hovered just above a 17-month trough against the dollar early in Asia on Tuesday, but reaction to the S&P downgrade was muted. Trading overnight was subdued as U.S. markets were shut for the Martin Luther King holiday.
The head of Austria's debt office told Reuters the loss of Vienna's AAA status had also been priced into the market already, and Austria was able to sell treasury bills on Monday at rates very close to zero.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy brushed off the historic loss of Paris' top credit rating for the first time since 1975, a blow to his campaign for re-election in May, saying France's policy would not be dictated by rating agencies.
Contrasting S&P's move with a statement by rival watchdog Moody's, which still has France on an Aaa rating, he said: "My deep belief is that it changes nothing. We must reduce the deficit, we must reduce our spending and we must improve the competitiveness of our economy to return to a path of growth."
LOSERS TO PAY?
Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti, whose debt-laden country was downgraded by two notches along with Spain, called last week during a visit to Berlin for the EFSF to be increased to ward off attacks on his country's bonds.
But a senior politician in Merkel's conservative CDU party, Michael Meister, said it was the downgraded countries that should increase their guarantees for the fund.
"Germany was not downgraded so our contribution should not be changed. Countries that were affected must contribute more to the guarantees," Meister told Reuters.
Sources familiar with Greece's talks with its private creditors said EU paymaster Germany was pressing for new bonds to be given to banks in the planned swap to carry a low coupon of less than four percent that would increase the banks' effective losses to 75 percent.
The IMF was also weighing on the talks by warning that the Greek economy and the euro zone's economic outlook have worsened since the bailout package was agreed in October, raising Athens' funding needs to make its debt sustainable by 2020, they said.
Greece put a brave face on the standoff. "There is a little pause in these discussions," Greek Prime Minister Lucas Papademos told CNBC television. "But I am confident they will continue and we will reach an agreement that is mutually acceptable in time."
Friday, 13 January 2012
S&P Europe Downgrades Said to Be Imminent
LONDON—Standard & Poor's has notified European governments that it is about to announce downgrades in the credit ratings of France and a number of European sovereigns as early as Friday, said two people familiar with the matter.
One of the people said an S&P notice is being circulated among euro-zone governments and that an announcement "could be imminent." S&P declined to comment.
In December, the ratings firm placed 15 of the 17 euro-zone countries on watch for possible downgrade, citing new systemic stresses that are pressuring the euro zone's credit standing as a whole.
Talk that S&P is on the brink of downgrading several European countries pushed the euro to a fresh session low against the dollar in Friday trading in New York. The common currency dropped as low as $1.2662, down from $1.2814 late Thursday.
The biggest question for financial markets is whether France will lose its triple-A rating after showing signs of fiscal slippage during its economic slowdown over the past year.
A downgrade of France's rating will, indirectly, raise the cost of borrowing for the European Financial Stability Facility, whose own rating depends largely on the credit quality of the countries that back it. The EFSF, which has also been placed on negative credit watch by the S&P, would then have to pass on those higher borrowing costs to countries such as Ireland and Portugal, making it even harder for them to reduce their budget deficits as planned.
The downgrades would also be a blow to Italy, which had seen a decline in its bond yields in recent sessions. The euro zone's third-largest economy is scheduled to sell €440 billion ($563.8 billion) of bonds and treasury bills in 2012 and investors are expected to demand higher yields for the risk of holding a lower-rated security.
The S&P's negative ratings watch included top-rated Germany, France, the Netherlands, Austria, Finland and Luxembourg—countries that S&P said could lose their premier credit status if European policy makers continue stumbling in efforts to tackle the immediate market confidence crisis. S&P also pointed to markedly higher risk premiums on a growing number of euro-zone sovereigns, including some rated triple-A.
Germany, which also has a triple-A credit rating, isn't expected to be among the downgrades.
Greece and Cyprus were the only two euro-zone sovereigns not affected by S&P's latest action. Cyprus had already been placed on negative watch, and Greece's status remained unchanged because its double-C rating already connotes a relatively high near-term probability of default.
Fitch Ratings, which has placed six euro-zone countries on negative ratings watch, has said it expects to complete its review by the end of January.
Bond yields of indebted euro-zone states reversed earlier falls and moved sharply higher on the news.
The Italian 10-year yield added 0.2 percentage points to trade at 6.75% after having made a low of 6.46% Friday, according to data from Tradeweb.
Spanish yields joined in the bearish move with the 10-year adding 0.18 percentage points to trade at 5.21% after having traded as low as 5% Friday.
France wasn't immune from the bearish sentiment with the 10-year bond yield rising by 0.07 percentage points to 3.03%.
Copyright 2011 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved
(online.WSJ.com)
One of the people said an S&P notice is being circulated among euro-zone governments and that an announcement "could be imminent." S&P declined to comment.
In December, the ratings firm placed 15 of the 17 euro-zone countries on watch for possible downgrade, citing new systemic stresses that are pressuring the euro zone's credit standing as a whole.
Talk that S&P is on the brink of downgrading several European countries pushed the euro to a fresh session low against the dollar in Friday trading in New York. The common currency dropped as low as $1.2662, down from $1.2814 late Thursday.
The biggest question for financial markets is whether France will lose its triple-A rating after showing signs of fiscal slippage during its economic slowdown over the past year.
A downgrade of France's rating will, indirectly, raise the cost of borrowing for the European Financial Stability Facility, whose own rating depends largely on the credit quality of the countries that back it. The EFSF, which has also been placed on negative credit watch by the S&P, would then have to pass on those higher borrowing costs to countries such as Ireland and Portugal, making it even harder for them to reduce their budget deficits as planned.
The downgrades would also be a blow to Italy, which had seen a decline in its bond yields in recent sessions. The euro zone's third-largest economy is scheduled to sell €440 billion ($563.8 billion) of bonds and treasury bills in 2012 and investors are expected to demand higher yields for the risk of holding a lower-rated security.
The S&P's negative ratings watch included top-rated Germany, France, the Netherlands, Austria, Finland and Luxembourg—countries that S&P said could lose their premier credit status if European policy makers continue stumbling in efforts to tackle the immediate market confidence crisis. S&P also pointed to markedly higher risk premiums on a growing number of euro-zone sovereigns, including some rated triple-A.
Germany, which also has a triple-A credit rating, isn't expected to be among the downgrades.
Greece and Cyprus were the only two euro-zone sovereigns not affected by S&P's latest action. Cyprus had already been placed on negative watch, and Greece's status remained unchanged because its double-C rating already connotes a relatively high near-term probability of default.
Fitch Ratings, which has placed six euro-zone countries on negative ratings watch, has said it expects to complete its review by the end of January.
Bond yields of indebted euro-zone states reversed earlier falls and moved sharply higher on the news.
The Italian 10-year yield added 0.2 percentage points to trade at 6.75% after having made a low of 6.46% Friday, according to data from Tradeweb.
Spanish yields joined in the bearish move with the 10-year adding 0.18 percentage points to trade at 5.21% after having traded as low as 5% Friday.
France wasn't immune from the bearish sentiment with the 10-year bond yield rising by 0.07 percentage points to 3.03%.
Copyright 2011 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved
(online.WSJ.com)
Euro Heads for Weekly Advance on Italy Bond Gains, ECB Optimism
Jan. 13 (Bloomberg) -- The euro headed for its first weekly gain versus the dollar in six weeks as Italian bonds advanced and European Central Bank President Mario Draghi said policy makers have averted a credit shortage.
The 17-nation currency strengthened earlier as Italy prepared to auction notes today. The Dollar Index was poised for its first weekly decline in three weeks before a U.S. report that economists said will show consumer confidence improved this month, reducing demand for the U.S. currency as a haven.
“Investors will focus on the outcome of today’s Italian bond auction,” Valentin Marinov, a senior foreign-exchange strategist at Citigroup Inc. in London, wrote in a note to clients. “Indications of resilient private demand could help the euro extend its gains further, especially against the dollar and yen.”
The euro was little changed at $1.2829 at 9:57 a.m. in London, having strengthened 0.9 percent this week, the first five-day advance since the period ended Dec. 2. The currency was was little changed at 98.38 yen, after advancing as much as 0.5 percent. The dollar fell 0.1 percent to 76.69 yen.
Italy will sell bonds due in 2014 and 2018 today after the nation’s borrowing costs more than halved at an auction of one- year bills yesterday. Italy’s 10-year yield fell 12 basis points, or 0.12 percentage point, today to 6.52 percent. Spanish 10-year yields dropped four basis points to 5.10 percent.
Stabilization Signs
Draghi said the central bank’s massive injection of cash into the financial system last month is beginning to flow through into credit markets. “There are tentative signs of stabilization of economic activity,” he said in Frankfurt after the ECB’s policy meeting yesterday. Policy makers kept the benchmark rate at a record low of 1 percent after two straight quarter-point reductions.
The Dollar Index, which IntercontinentalExchange Inc. uses to track the greenback against the currencies of six major U.S. trading partners, dropped 0.1 percent to 80.739, having declined 0.6 percent this week.
The Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan preliminary consumer confidence index rose to 71.5 for January from 69.9 in December, according to a Bloomberg survey before today’s report.
The dollar has depreciated 0.7 percent in the past week, the second-worst performance among the 10 developed-nation currencies tracked by Bloomberg Correlation-Weighted Indexes. The euro has risen 0.2 percent.
Gains in the euro may be tempered as it approaches levels of so-called resistance at $1.2860 and $1.2933, according to Karen Jones, head of fixed-income, commodity and currency technical analysis at Commerzbank AG in London. These represent last-year’s low and a short-term down channel, she wrote today in a note to clients.
(businessweek.com)
The 17-nation currency strengthened earlier as Italy prepared to auction notes today. The Dollar Index was poised for its first weekly decline in three weeks before a U.S. report that economists said will show consumer confidence improved this month, reducing demand for the U.S. currency as a haven.
“Investors will focus on the outcome of today’s Italian bond auction,” Valentin Marinov, a senior foreign-exchange strategist at Citigroup Inc. in London, wrote in a note to clients. “Indications of resilient private demand could help the euro extend its gains further, especially against the dollar and yen.”
The euro was little changed at $1.2829 at 9:57 a.m. in London, having strengthened 0.9 percent this week, the first five-day advance since the period ended Dec. 2. The currency was was little changed at 98.38 yen, after advancing as much as 0.5 percent. The dollar fell 0.1 percent to 76.69 yen.
Italy will sell bonds due in 2014 and 2018 today after the nation’s borrowing costs more than halved at an auction of one- year bills yesterday. Italy’s 10-year yield fell 12 basis points, or 0.12 percentage point, today to 6.52 percent. Spanish 10-year yields dropped four basis points to 5.10 percent.
Stabilization Signs
Draghi said the central bank’s massive injection of cash into the financial system last month is beginning to flow through into credit markets. “There are tentative signs of stabilization of economic activity,” he said in Frankfurt after the ECB’s policy meeting yesterday. Policy makers kept the benchmark rate at a record low of 1 percent after two straight quarter-point reductions.
The Dollar Index, which IntercontinentalExchange Inc. uses to track the greenback against the currencies of six major U.S. trading partners, dropped 0.1 percent to 80.739, having declined 0.6 percent this week.
The Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan preliminary consumer confidence index rose to 71.5 for January from 69.9 in December, according to a Bloomberg survey before today’s report.
The dollar has depreciated 0.7 percent in the past week, the second-worst performance among the 10 developed-nation currencies tracked by Bloomberg Correlation-Weighted Indexes. The euro has risen 0.2 percent.
Gains in the euro may be tempered as it approaches levels of so-called resistance at $1.2860 and $1.2933, according to Karen Jones, head of fixed-income, commodity and currency technical analysis at Commerzbank AG in London. These represent last-year’s low and a short-term down channel, she wrote today in a note to clients.
(businessweek.com)
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