Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Euro rises vs dollar but gains may prove short-lived

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Euro rises vs dollar but gains may prove short-lived
Jul 25th 2012, 18:46

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Wed Jul 25, 2012 2:46pm EDT

  * Nowotny: sees grounds for giving ESM a banking license      * Euro rebounds from 2-year low, but gains set to be  short-lived      * Moody's cuts outlook on EU stability facility to negative          By Wanfeng Zhou      NEW YORK, July 25 (Reuters) - The euro rose for the first  time against the dollar in six days on Wednesday after a  European Central Bank member said he could see grounds for  giving the euro zone bailout fund a banking license that would  increase its crisis fighting firepower.      The comments from Ewald Nowotny prompted a flurry of  short-covering and helped the euro rebound from a two-year low  as investors who had bet against the single currency were  squeezed out of those positions.      Nevertheless, many analysts said the downtrend for the euro  remained intact. While a banking license would enable the  bailout fund to borrow unlimited central bank money to fight the  debt crisis, it's still just an idea and one that may not come  to fruition given other ECB officials' opposition.      "Just the prospect that you can see an alternative solution  to help prop up Europe is being viewed as a positive," said  Gareth Sylvester, senior currency strategist at Klarity FX in  San Francisco.      "The reality is that it's simply an idea and nothing more  than that just yet," he said. "The actual EU constitution would  have to be amended to give (the European Stability Mechanism)  those powers and it has to be ratified by all member states."      The euro hit a session high of $1.2169, recovering  from a two-year low of $1.2040 set on Tuesday. It was last up  0.8 percent at $1.2157.      The euro garnered an added boost after Spain and France said  on Wednesday in a joint statement that stability of the euro  area needs the adoption of a single supervisory mechanism for  the bloc's banks by the end of this year..      Against the yen, the euro rose as high as 95.20 yen  , having carved out a new 12-year low of around 94.11  earlier in the week. It was last up 0.7 percent at 94.97 yen.      The dollar was little changed at 78.14 yen.        MORE PAIN FOR SPAIN      Sentiment toward the euro remained bearish given spiraling  Spanish borrowing costs that have fueled concerns the country  will need a full sovereign bailout.       A break below support at the psychologically important level  of $1.20 would open up a test of the 2010 low of $1.1875.      "It's going to be a slow grind down towards that," said  Fabian Eliasson, vice president of currency sales at Mizuho  Corporate Bank in New York. "Volatilty is just too high to see  it going straight down -- two steps backward and one step  forward."        Yields on Spanish debt have jumped since last week when the  region of Valencia said it would need financial help from  Madrid, with investors concerned other indebted regions will  also seek aid.       As speculation grew that Spain, the fourth-largest economy  in the euro zone, may need a full-scale sovereign bailout,  investors were worried that Europe's bailout fund would have  little money left to support other troubled countries including  Greece, Italy and Portugal.      Delivering yet more bad news for Europe, Moody's changed the  outlook on its provisional top-notch rating for the European  Financial Stability Facility to negative, while Egan-Jones on  Wednesday cut Italy's sovereign rating.      Moody's earlier in the week changed the outlooks for  Germany, the Netherlands and Luxembourg to negative. All three  are guarantors for the EFSF, with Germany holding the largest  share at just over 29 percent.      The U.S. dollar briefly pared losses against the euro after  data showing new U.S. single-family home sales in June fell by  the most in more than a year dented risk appetite. But the  impact was short-lived as the data fueled expectations of  further stimulus from the Federal Reserve.  
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