Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Euro edges higher versus dollar ahead of ECB

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Euro edges higher versus dollar ahead of ECB
Jul 31st 2012, 13:49

Tue Jul 31, 2012 9:49am EDT

  * Nervous investors await ECB action after Draghi comments      * Australian dollar hits record high vs euro      * Focus on this week's ECB and Fed meetings        By Wanfeng Zhou      NEW YORK, July 31 (Reuters) - The euro edged higher against  the dollar and yen on Tuesday on expectations the European  Central Bank may take further actions to help contain the debt  crisis later this week.      Speculation grew the ECB could revive its bond purchase  program to help lower the borrowing costs of debt-stricken Spain  and Italy after ECB President Mario Draghi said last week the  bank would do whatever it takes to save the euro. But analysts  cautioned the bank may disappoint.      "It's going to be more or less buy the rumor, sell the  fact," said Michael Woolfolk, senior currency strategist at BNY  Mellon in New York. "So expect the euro to be well supported up  to just before the decision and then probably some profit-taking  thereafter."      The euro rose as high as $1.2318 on Reuters data,  still below a three-week high of $1.2389 set last week. It was  last at $1.2283, up 0.2 percent. It also rose 0.4 percent to  96.16 yen.      Month-end demand also supported the euro as traders reported  sovereign buying in the euro/sterling and euro/Swiss franc  currency pairs. Traders cited strong offers above $1.2300 while  bids were layered below $1.2250 and stop losses at $1.2220.       Many analysts questioned how much the ECB can deliver, given  euro zone paymaster Germany is opposed to the central bank  buying government bonds in the secondary market and granting a  banking license to the bloc's rescue fund.       "There is a clear danger that expectations might be too high  ... He's got to put his money where his mouth is, as there is a  risk of disappointment around Thursday," said Nick Parsons, head  of markets strategy at nabCapital in London.      If the ECB does not signal further measures, the euro could  fall back below $1.2130, but a firm response could lift it above  last week's peak, he said.       "After that you'd really be looking at $1.2693, the high on  the last trading day of June, but we'd really need to see  monetary shock and awe to take to us to those sorts of levels,"  Parsons added.      Investors also awaited a policy announcement from the  Federal Reserve at the end of its two-day meeting on Wednesday.  While the Fed is likely to hold off from adopting another  bond-buying program for now, some analysts say it might adopt  such monetary stimulus in coming months.      The dollar edged up 0.1 percent to 78.21 yen.         AUSSIE GAINS          The euro hit a record low against the higher-yielding  Australian dollar of A$1.1638. Expectations that the  ECB may lower interest rates again in the coming months have  made the euro a favorite funding currency for investors seeking  higher yields.          The Australian dollar also hit a four-month high against the  U.S. dollar at $1.0538, buoyed by comments from Chinese  premier Wen Jiabao that China would fine-tune policy to support  economic growth.        Analysts said long-term investors like central banks have  also increased holdings of high-yielding currencies, especially  at the expense of the euro.      Data from the Swiss National Bank showed an increase in euro  holdings in the bank's foreign-exchange reserves in the second  quarter as it has been defending the 1.20 franc per euro peg  since last September by buying the common currency.      That led to speculation that the SNB may soon be selling  euros in favor of other growth-linked currencies such as the  Australian dollar.       "With an estimated 184 billion euros still on its balance  sheet, continued future offloading of euros could have a  meaningful impact on euro crosses," said Geoffrey Kendrick,  currency analyst at Nomura.      Data on Tuesday showed U.S. single-family home prices rose  for the fourth month in a row in May, while spending by American  consumers fell in June for the first time in nearly a year when  accounting for inflation. But the market impact was limited as  investors focused on the Fed and ECB meetings this week.  
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