Thursday, July 19, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Euro falls as Spain's bank woes, weak US data haunt

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Euro falls as Spain's bank woes, weak US data haunt
Jul 19th 2012, 19:45

Thu Jul 19, 2012 3:45pm EDT

  * Euro hits record low vs Aussie dollar      * German finance minister's comments weigh on euro      * Weak U.S. data dims risk appetite        NEW YORK, July 19 (Reuters) - The euro fell against the  dollar on Thursday and touched a record low against the  Australian dollar and a 3-1/2-year trough versus sterling, as  weak U.S. data and fresh warnings from Germany about Spain's  banking troubles diminished risk appetite.      A slew of soft U.S. economic data reinforced views that  recovery in the world's largest economy has stalled, prompting  investors to pare back positions in higher-yielding assets  perceived as risky.       Riskier currencies such as the Australian and New Zealand  dollars were still up on the day against the dollar and euro,  but off their peaks.      Comments from German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble  ahead of a German parliamentary vote on aid for Spanish banks   did not help the common currency. Schaeuble said Spain's  financial troubles are far from over and its government should  be ultimately responsible for European aid to its banks.      He also said that the mere perception of insolvency risk in  Spain could cause contagion in the euro zone.       "The Germans are being strict that the liability stays with  the sovereign and all that does is exacerbate the debt burden of  the sovereign and the market doesn't like that," said Boris  Schlossberg, managing director at BK Asset Management in New  York.      Losses in the euro, however, were capped by news that German  Chancellor Angela Merkel ultimately won a parliamentary vote on  the euro zone rescue package for Spanish banks despite growing  unease in her center-right coalition over the rising cost of  Europe's debt crisis for German taxpayers.       "Obviously the U.S. numbers that came out were not too good,  and we also had comments from Schaeuble that were not positive  for the euro," said Tom Fitzpatrick, chief technical currency  strategist at CitiFX in New York. "So the combination of the two  prompted a bit of adjustment to the downside."      The euro hit session lows at $1.2227 in the wake of  Schaeuble's comments and was last at $1.2270, down 0.1 percent  on the day.      Spanish 10-year yields climbed back above 7 percent after  Schaeuble's comments. Spain sold 3 billion euros in  debt at a higher cost than previous auctions.       Analysts expect the euro to retest a two-year low hit last  week because investors, discouraged by a lack of progress toward  solving the euro-zone debt crisis, continue to shun the currency  in favor of safer havens.      Data on Thursday showing a rise in U.S. jobless claims, an  unexpected fall in U.S. existing home sales, and a  worse-than-forecast contraction in the mid-Atlantic region's  factory activity lent support to the dollar as a safe haven.         The positive impact on the dollar could fade, however, noted  Joe Manimbo, senior market analyst at Western Union Business  Solutions in Washington.      The data "can be a source of medium-term weakness for the  dollar as investors increase bets the Fed will act to shore up a  listless recovery," Manimbo said.      Another round of quantitative easing by the Federal Reserve  would hurt the greenback because bond-buying by the Fed  effectively floods the financial system with dollars, reducing  the currency's value.             WEAKNESS VS THE YEN       The euro also fell 0.4 percent against the yen to  96.42 yen and hit a record low against the higher-yielding  Australian dollar as well as hitting a 3-1/2-year low  against the UK pound.      The euro zone's common currency also hit a record low versus  the New Zealand dollar.      The Australian dollar rose broadly, hitting a 2-1/2-month  high against the U.S. dollar of A$1.0445. Traders cited  demand from Australian companies to buy the currency as well as  talk of central banks looking to diversify their holdings into  Australian assets.      TD Securities in a note said falling volatility has spawned  carry trades, in which investors borrow in lower-yielding  currencies to buy assets with higher returns, at the expense of  the euro and the dollar.      Since the start of the year, TD said, EUR/AUD shorts have  produced total returns of more than 9 percent, EUR/NZD shorts  nearly 10 percent, while EUR/CAD shorts have yielded returns of  just under 7 percent.      The U.S. dollar fell to a six-week low against the yen of  78.42 yen, with investors preferring the Japanese  currency due to the chance of more U.S. monetary easing. It last  traded at 78.57 yen, down 0.3 percent on the day.  
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