Friday, August 24, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Euro falls 1st time in 5 days after solid ECB-inspired week

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Euro falls 1st time in 5 days after solid ECB-inspired week
Aug 24th 2012, 18:51

Fri Aug 24, 2012 2:51pm EDT

  * Euro retreats from Thursday's seven-week high vs. dollar      * Market seizes on talk of temporary Greek exit      * Investors then focus on news ECB to set yield-band targets      * Bernanke says there is scope for further Fed action        By Julie Haviv      NEW YORK, Aug 24 (Reuters) - The euro fell against the  dollar for the first time in five sessions on Friday, receding  from the previous day's seven-week high, as participants  questioned how close policymakers are to coming up with a plan  to tackle the European debt crisis.       The single currency shared by 17 countries pared losses  after central bank sources told Reuters the European Central  Bank is considering setting yield band targets under a new  bond-buying program to let it keep its strategy shielded and  avoid speculators trying to cash in..      The euro had earlier fallen to a session low against the  dollar after Market News International reported senior euro-zone  officials as saying the German Finance Ministry is seriously  considering a plan in which Greece would be obliged to ask for a  temporary exit from the euro zone until it sorts out its public  finances..      Overall, however, it has been a banner week for the euro.  Speculation that the ECB will unveil plans to help lower Spanish  and Italian bond yields at its next policy meeting on Sept. 6  caused the euro to rally from $1.2333 a week ago to trade above  $1.25.       "This was a very good week for tail risk, with talk of the  ECB buying bonds and Wednesday's Fed minutes both being risk  positive," said Steven Englander, head of G10 strategy at  CitiFX, a division of Citigroup in New York.       "Having said that, with shorts being taken out and longs  added, the euro's upside is limited from here because market  positioning is not as favorable," he said.       The euro last traded at $1.2534, down 0.2 percent and below  Thursday's peak of $1.2589, its highest since early July.  Despite Friday's losses, it has gained 1.7 percent this week,  its best weekly performance on a percentage basis since Feb. 26  at current prices.       CitiFX's Englander said the euro's bounce this week will  likely not grow into a trend reversal higher.      "Whatever the theoretical promise of ECB bond buying  proposals, implementation setbacks could limit the positive  impact of concerted peripheral bond buying by the ECB, the EFSF  (European Financial Stability Facility) and, when ratified, the  ESM (European Stability Mechanism)."      Also limiting the euro's upside is that euro growth should   remain weak and Citi's economists do not think that QE3 is a  done deal in the near term, he said.      Minutes released this past week from the last Federal Open  Market Committee meeting, the Federal Reserve's policy making  arm, raised the prospect that the Fed may embark on a third  round of quantitative easing to boost the economy.      The Federal Reserve has room to deliver additional monetary  stimulus to boost the U.S. economy, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke  told a Congressional oversight panel in a letter obtained by  Reuters on Friday.          Bernanke at the end of next week will give a closely watched  speech at an annual symposium in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, which  will be closely watched for clues into the prospect of further  bond-buying from the Fed.          Another round of quantitative easing would be negative for  the dollar as it is tantamount to printing money and dilutes its  value.           SPANISH DENIAL          The euro rose to a seven-week high on Thursday after sources  told Reuters that Spain is in talks with euro-zone partners over  conditions for aid to bring down its borrowing costs, though the  country has not made a final decision to request a bailout.         But Soraya Saenz de Santamaria, Spain's deputy prime  minister, on Friday denied the country was in talks with the  euro zone over financial assistance.       "The critical thing is to control interest-rate costs for  Italy and Spain," said Boris Schlossberg, managing director of  FX strategy at BK Asset Management in New York, after news of  the yield-band targets. "A band, I think, does two things: It  allows them flexibility not to commit to a specific level, and  it allows them to achieve policy goals with a minimum of capital  expenditure. And it should spook speculators."      After the ECB meeting on Sept.6, there are Dutch elections  and a German Constitutional Court ruling on the euro-zone rescue  fund on Sept. 12 and an EU finance ministers' meeting starting  on Sept. 14.      The dollar was last up 0.2 percent at 78.54 yen,  according to Reuters data.  
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