Friday, July 20, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Euro again drops broadly on new Spain fears

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Euro again drops broadly on new Spain fears
Jul 20th 2012, 20:16

Fri Jul 20, 2012 4:16pm EDT

  * Spain's Valencia says seeking debt help      * Euro hits record lows vs Australia, Canada, NZ dollars      * Euro at more than 11-year low vs Japanese yen        NEW YORK, July 20 (Reuters) - The euro slumped broadly on  Friday, setting a two-year low against the dollar after Spain's  Valencia region said it would seek central government help to  repay its debts, raising concerns the euro zone's fourth-largest  economy may be forced to seek a full-scale international  bailout.        A cut by the Spanish government of its economic growth  forecasts for 2012 and 2013 also pressured the euro. Spain's  revised estimates indicated that the country would be mired in  recession well into next year.       As a result, the euro zone common currency plunged to record  lows against the Australian, Canadian, and New Zealand dollar.  It also hit a more than 11-year low against the yen, a  three-and-a-half-month low against sterling and multi-month  troughs versus the Norwegian and Swedish crowns.      Spanish 5- and 10-year debt yields surged to euro-era highs  as Valencia, Spain's most indebted region alongside Catalonia,  sought help under an 18-billion-euro program passed on Thursday  aimed at helping regional finances.       "It's all about Spanish bond yields today, and the euro as a  result is under pressure," said Martin Briggs, risk advisory  consultant for global payments company AFEX Markets Plc in  London.      "We have been telling our clients that this euro is a  slow-motion train crash that's happening in front of our eyes.  No-one seems to have the will or the ability to make the tough  decisions that need to take place."      A statement saying euro zone finance ministers formally  approved Spain's bank bailout failed to offset the gloom.         The euro fell as low as $1.2143 against the U.S.  dollar, its weakest level since mid-June 2010, as traders took  out an options barrier at $1.2150. It was last at $1.2159, down  nearly 1.0 percent on the day, declining for a third straight  session and posting losses of about 0.7 percent this week.      It was the third week of declines for the single currency  against the dollar.       The single currency hit record lows against the  higher-yielding Australian dollar, the Canadian dollar   and New Zealand dollar.       The euro hit a more than 11-year low against the Japanese  yen of 95.34 yen, a three-and-a-half-year low against  the British pound, a four-month trough against the  Norwegian crown and an 11-1/2-year low against the  Swedish currency.       In data collated to July 17, speculators had increased bets  against the euro. Changes in speculative positions  after the Valencia news will only appear in data collated  through July 24.        A statement by the ECB saying Greek government bonds are not  eligible as collateral did not help the euro, with the currency  declining further against the dollar on the news.         Earlier in the session the euro dipped on a German newspaper  report that quoted a member of a party in the coalition  government as saying euro zone countries should comply with  agreed reforms or leave the bloc, traders said.       The comments repeated the position taken earlier this year  by the same lawmaker, Gerda Hasselfeldt, of the Bavarian  Christian Social Union.      The euro has also taken a hit since the European Central  Bank lowered its deposit rate, which acts as the floor for euro  zone money market rates, to zero earlier this month.      Two-year bond yields have dipped into negative territory in  core triple-A rated Germany and the Netherlands. The negative  interest rates could prompt investors who are bearish on the  euro's outlook to shift money elsewhere to secure some return on  capital, market players said.               COMMODITY CURRENCY STRENGTH      Many analysts said the fact commodity currencies were  rallying against the euro despite concerns about Chinese growth  slowing was a sign that weakness in the single currency could  continue.      The potential for another round of asset buying from the  Federal Reserve may help support commodities and the Australian  dollar, analysts said.      Speculation the Fed may opt for another round of monetary  easing to boost growth, which would increase the supply of  dollars in the system, slowed the euro's decline against the  U.S. currency.      The cut in the ECB deposit rate to zero and the subsequent  drop in money-market rates has also stirred talk of euro-funded  carry trades, in which investors effectively borrow low-yielding  currencies to invest in higher-yielding currencies and assets.      JPMorgan on Friday put out a note to clients saying it  expects the ECB to cut the deposit facility rate to below zero.  The U.S. investment bank expects both the refinancing and  deposit rates to be cut in October, allowing the ECB a bit more  time to assess any negative effects of the zero deposit rate  before taking it negative.      Traders said the JPMorgan note helped fuel a euro sell-off  as well.  
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