Fri May 25, 2012 12:04am EDT
* EUR option barriers at $1.2500; stops at $1.2480
* Break of $1.25 targets June 2010 low of $1.1876
* USD/JPY supported by importers, short-covering
* DXY at its highest since Sept 2010
* Sell-off in Asian currencies weighs on Aussie
By Antoni Slodkowski
TOKYO, May 25 (Reuters) - The euro wallowed at two-year lows against the dollar on Friday, weighed down by weak German manufacturing data which showed that no European state is immune from the ongoing debt crisis, which saw the currency tumble nearly 2 percent this week.
Rattled by worries over lack of growth in the euro area, the fragile situation of the region's banking system and a potential messy Greek exit from the single currency bloc, the euro is poised to chalk up its biggest weekly loss since the first week of April.
Macro funds and real money investors have ramped up selling of the currency, which is now down more than 5 percent in May, as concerns about Greece leaving the zone rose after an inconclusive election that heightened the risk of its bankruptcy.
Greeks are voting again on June 17, with polls showing a close race between parties supporting and opposing terms of the its international bailout, keeping markets on tenterhooks.
The euro fetched $1.2525, a stone's throw from $1.2516, its lowest level since July 2010 plumbed the day before. Against the yen, it recovered from a four-month trough of 99.37 yen to last stand at 99.90.
"The pace of the euro's fall has been very quick and the market is looking for a level to consolidate around - it may well be around 1.25," said Teppei Ino, currency analyst at the Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ.
"U.S. markets are closed on Monday, and that too is likely to prevent traders from any excessive risk-taking," Ino said.
But with the euro zone economy in dire straits and its politicians openly talking about a Greek exit, traders said that the common currency would sooner or later have to yield to the pressure and pierce the nearest support at $1.2500.
A break of that level would target the June 2010 low of $1.1876 with not much in the way of technical support this side of $1.2000. For now, traders cite a formidable option barrier at $1.2500 with large stop-loss orders looming around $1.2480.
Darkening the picture further, European Central Bank data showed 35.4 billion euros of net direct portfolio investment flowed out of the euro zone in March, as investors shunned the region's assets.
Investor skittishness is well-reflected in the options market, where euro/dollar one-month at-the-money implied volatility spiked to 13.13 percent, its highest in more than four months.
With the euro on the backfoot, the dollar has been the big winner with its index against a basket of major currencies edging up to 82.398, its highest since September 2010.
Against the yen, the greenback inched up 0.2 percent to 79.74 yen, supported by Tokyo importers and short-covering ahead of the long weekend in the United States. Sell offers around 80.00 yen are poised to cap any further gains, traders say.
As a sell-off in emerging market currencies accelerated, the risk-sensitive Australian dollar dipped 0.2 percent to $0.9741 , coming close to the six-month low of $0.9690 hit on Wednesday.
The dollar also muscled in on the Korean won by 0.6 percent to 1,184 won, pushing it to the lowest level since October last year, and by 0.4 percent on Indonesian rupiah , pushing it to 9,300 - the lowest level since May 2010.
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