Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Euro cut to near 2-year low on Spain bank angst

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Euro cut to near 2-year low on Spain bank angst
May 29th 2012, 20:58

Tue May 29, 2012 4:58pm EDT

  * Euro at one point slides below $1.25      * Spanish banking problems overtake worries about Greece      * Egan-Jones Ratings cut Spain's credit level      * Dollar hits 15-month high on Swiss franc          By Wanfeng Zhou and Daniel Bases         NEW YORK, May 29 (Reuters) - The euro fell on Tuesday to its  weakest level versus the U.S. dollar since July 2010 on Spain's  soaring borrowing costs and expectations more spending will be  necessary to support its ailing banks.        The euro's losses accelerated after Egan-Jones Ratings cut  Spain's credit rating yet again. Tuesday's move was the small  firm's third downgrade of the country's sovereign debt in less  than a month as Spain's weak banks continue to worry investors.                Spanish bond yields held near peaks in Tuesday's trading.  The spread between Spanish and German government bond yields hit  its highest since the euro was launched in 1999 after a  government source said Madrid will recapitalize nationalized  lender Bankia by issuing new debt.            "All eyes are on Spanish borrowing costs now. We're stuck in  a $1.25-$1.2640 range, which suggests everyone who wants to be  short the euro is already short," said Kathy Lien, director of  currency research at GFT in Jersey City.              "The next catalyst could come from a rise above 7 percent in  Spanish yields, which would accelerate selling. But if not, we  could see some consolidation."        Investors' Europe-sensitive nerves contributed to the sharp  drop in the euro on the Egan-Jones news, taking the currency  below the psychologically important $1.25 level. It managed to  claw back some ground by late New York trade to $1.2505, still a  loss of 0.28 percent on the day. The session low was  $1.2461 on Reuters data, the weakest since July 1, 2010.              The next downside target lies around $1.2450, where traders  reported stop-loss sell orders and option barriers.           The euro recouped some ground against the yen but still  traded down 0.28 percent at 99.35 yen. It had earlier  dropped to 98.91 yen, the lowest since January.       The dollar gyrated around the break-even point against the  yen. It last traded unchanged at 79.45 < JPY=>. Still, that is  not far from a recent three-month low of 79.002 yen set on  trading platform EBS. The pair briefly slipped after data showed  U.S. consumer confidence unexpectedly fell to its lowest level  in four months.       Against the Swiss franc, the dollar climbed to a 15-month  high of 0 .9633 and was last up 0.19 percent at 0.9599  franc.                          BANK WORRIES              Earlier, the single currency found support after Greek polls  showed more strength for pro-bailout parties ahead of the  country's election on June 17, easing fears that Greece may  leave the euro zone. But the gains were also short-lived.             Many traders expect further downside in the euro as they  fear troubles at Spanish banks, hit by a property slump, could  further complicate Madrid's efforts to rein in its debt.              Spanish 10-year bond yields hovered at 6.47  percent. A level of 7 percent is seen as a tipping point.  Euro-zone countries that have previously requested bailouts did  so soon after their 10-year yields rose above that mark.              "The bad news just keeps coming, and if Spain were to ask  for a bailout, we would see the euro come under more pressure,"  said Steve Barrow, head of G10 currency research at Standard  Bank.         "The euro remains a currency that is sold at every  opportunity. We have revised our three- to six-month forecasts  down to $1.15 from $1.20 earlier."            Spain's fourth-largest lender, Bankia, has asked  for a bailout of 19 billion euros, in addition to 4.5 billion  euros the state has already pumped in to cover possible losses  on repossessed property, loans and investments.       Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy has ruled out seeking outside  aid to revive Spain's banking sector, but many investors are  skeptical that the country's lenders can be recapitalized  without external funding.             Most economists believe that Spain's banks will need outside  financial help.       "The point about Spain is it's going to need some external  support of some form," said David Owen, chief European financial  economist at Jefferies.       "Whether that implies the European Central Bank buys bonds  (in the secondary market) or moves lock, stock and barrel to  quantitative easing over the next three months, certainly the  situation at the moment is not sustainable."  
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