Friday, June 8, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Euro slides as euro zone risks escalate

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Euro slides as euro zone risks escalate
Jun 8th 2012, 20:55

Fri Jun 8, 2012 4:55pm EDT

  * Euro slumps after Spanish rating downgrade      * Spain expected to request aid package at weekend - sources      * Weak Italian, German economic data adds to gloom      * Euro posts weekly gains of 0.6 percent vs dollar          By Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss       NEW YORK, June 8 (Reuters) - The euro fell against the U.S.  dollar on Friday after a  downgrade to Spain's credit rating and  signs of economic weakness in Italy and Germany, leaving the  single currency  vulnerable as euro zone risks increased.             Despite Friday's losses, the euro posted its best weekly  performance since April, notching gains after five straight  weeks of declines. Analysts, however, were convinced gains would  be short-lived as investors sought to square up ahead of the  weekend.              European Union and German sources told Reuters Spain was  expected to ask for an aid package over the weekend to prop up  its troubled banks.           Rating agency Fitch slashed Spain's credit rating on  Thursday, leaving it just two notches above junk status. It  signaled further downgrades could come as the country tries to  restructure its troubled banking system.              "We have come to the edge of the cliff. There are so many  issues in Europe now," said Simon Smollett, senior currency  options strategist at Credit Agricole in London. "We're all  waiting for the Greek elections and when that's over, we have  Spain."       Last month's Greek election resulted in no party achieving  the 50 percent threshold needed to achieve a majority. Greece  was unable to form a coalition government, setting up the next  round of elections on June 17.        A victory for anti-bailout parties would raise the  possibility of Greece leaving the currency union.             The euro was last down 0.4 percent at $1.2508,  retreating from a two-week high of $1.2625 hit on Thursday after  a surprise interest rate cut by the Chinese central bank.             More losses would leave the euro vulnerable to a test of the  23-month low of $1.2286 hit on June 1, based on Reuters data,  after failing to break above chart resistance at $1.2623, the  January low.          The euro also took a hit after Italian industrial production  fell far more than expected in April and German imports tumbled  at their fastest rate in two years, adding to euro zone  recession concerns.           But the common currency came off its lows after China said  it would cut fuel prices by nearly 6 percent from Saturday,  which some traders saw as another positive step that may help  stimulate China's economy.            Net short positioning on the euro hit another record high,  according to data from the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading  Commission, as risk aversion drove the currency market. Exposure  to commodity currencies was reduced across the board, with the  Australian dollar taking a big hit.           "We are now less confident that the euro zone will continue  to muddle through," said global macro hedge fund GLC Ltd in  London. "The countries that need to make the biggest adjustment  have the weakest economies. In addition, austerity fatigue is  spreading."           GLC, which manages assets of about $1 billion, has taken  risky trades off the table and even if news out of Europe  improves and the euro spikes as a result, it would look to short  the currency.         The euro fell 0.7 percent against the yen to 99.36  yen. The safe-haven Japanese currency gained broadly as market  sentiment declined, with the dollar losing 0.3 percent to 79.45  yen.          But the euro still posted its best week versus the yen since  late February, with a gain of 2.3 percent.            Currencies with more perceived risk initially came under  pressure after U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke  offered no hints of imminent monetary stimulus on Thursday,  upsetting some market players who had positioned for a dovish  statement.            But by late afternoon, the higher-yielding Australian dollar   rose 0.4 percent on the day against the U.S. currency to  US$0.9922 as U.S. stocks ended higher, while the New Zealand  dollar gained 0.6 percent to US$0.7710.       Thomson Reuters on Friday released its monthly foreign  exchange trading volumes for May 2012. May average daily volume  was $154 billion, up from $130 billion in April but down from  the $161 billion in May, 2011.        ICAP said on Friday that average daily spot FX volumes on  the EBS platform, which competes with Thomson Reuters, were  $130.8 billion for May.  
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