Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Dollar slips versus euro in choppy trade after Fed

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Dollar slips versus euro in choppy trade after Fed
Jun 20th 2012, 21:00

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Wed Jun 20, 2012 5:00pm EDT

  * Fed twists again; Bernanke says ready to do more      * Greece coalition takes power      * Italy wants euro rescue funds to buy debt of distressed  countries        By Wanfeng Zhou      NEW YORK, June 20 (Reuters) - The dollar edged lower against  the euro in volatile trade on Wednesday after the Federal  Reserve extended its latest monetary stimulus, saying it was  ready to do even more to help support a U.S. economic recovery  that looks increasingly fragile.      The U.S. central bank expanded its "Operation Twist"  program, an effort to keep borrowing costs down by selling  short-term securities and buying long-term ones. The move was  largely expected by investors.      The Fed also slashed its forecasts for U.S. economic growth.  In a press conference following the Fed meeting, Bernanke said  the central bank would consider further asset purchases if the  economy needs further support.      The dollar had initially rallied after the Fed announcement  as some investors were disappointed that the central bank did  not signal another round of quantitative easing. That also  weighed on riskier, growth-linked currencies such as the euro  and Canadian and Australian dollars, but the move  faded.      "While the market was clearly looking for more from the Fed,  their significant downgrades to growth, inflation and employment  certainly keeps the door open for outright quantitative easing  (QE3) later in the year," said Chris Tevere, senior currency  strategist at Forex.com in New York.      The euro last traded at $1.2700, up 0.1 percent on  the day, having hit a session low of $1.2636 on Reuters data  after the Fed announcement.      Adding to positive sentiment toward the euro, a  conservative-led government took power in Greece on Wednesday  and promised to negotiate softer terms on its harsh  international bailout.      A proposal put forward by Italy for the euro zone's rescue  funds to start buying the debt of distressed European countries  also supported the common currency. The proposal is expected to  be discussed at a meeting of European leaders on Friday but it  would require a huge shift in Germany's stance for it to gain  credence.       German Chancellor Angela Merkel said that both of Europe's  bailout funds included mechanisms for buying state debt on the  secondary bond market but stressed that this was a "purely  theoretical" question and was not being discussed.         The euro could see a bounce if the proposal is implemented  although a sustained rise is unlikely, traders said.      The euro was up 0.9 percent against the safe-haven yen  , at 101.05 yen, while the dollar rose 0.8 percent  against the Japanese currency to 79.56 yen.      The greenback's weakness saw sterling trade near a one-month  high at $1.5778, despite minutes from the latest  meeting of the rate-setting committee of the Bank of England  showing policymakers are on the verge of another round of  monetary easing in the UK.       But the pound later gave up gains and last traded at  $1.5712, slightly down on the day.  
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