Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Euro falls as risk rally fades, Spain in focus

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Euro falls as risk rally fades, Spain in focus
Sep 25th 2012, 20:23

Tue Sep 25, 2012 4:23pm EDT

  * Spanish protester clash with police      * Spain, Greece worries weigh on euro      * Euro blocked by tough resistance at $1.2970        By Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss      NEW YORK, Sept 25 (Reuters) - The euro slid against the  dollar late in the New York session on Tuesday, pressured by a  late fall in stocks and commodities as investors grew cautious  about developments in debt-plagued Spain.      Spain, in no rush to seek a bailout, prepared for a new  round of austerity measures in the 2013 budget but was met  Tuesday by protesters who clashed with police in the country's  capital.       Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy has already passed  spending cuts and tax hikes worth slightly more than 60 billion  euros over the next two years, but half-year figures show the  2012 deficit target slipping from view as tax income forecasts  will not be hit due to economic contraction.      "The Spanish budget data was pretty appalling," said Tommy  Molloy, chief dealer at FX Solutions in Ridgewood, New Jersey.  "Tax receipts were lower while spending was higher, which  indicates that austerity is not something that's going to work  in Spain."      He added that it's really just a matter of time before the  Spanish government seeks a bailout even as the country's  Andalusia region is already considering seeking a 4.9  billion-euro emergency credit line.       Equities and commodities as a result lost momentum, while  the euro and commodity-linked currencies such as the Australian  and Canadian dollars fell after trading higher for most of the  New York session.      European Central Bank President Mario Draghi's vigorous  defense of the bank's bond-buying plan to a skeptical German  audience on Tuesday had earlier underpinned the euro.         But even then, most analysts were convinced that the euro's  rally wouldn't last long.      The euro last traded down 0.2 percent at $1.2906  after dropping to $1.2885, its lowest since Sept. 13. If the  euro turns lower again it could target the 200-day moving  average at $1.2827.      The euro hit a high of $1.2970, a key trendline resistance  over the last two weeks. Molloy and TD Securities Greg Moore  were both convinced that the euro zone common currency's recent  rally is finished.      Some market participants have already taken to the sidelines  ahead of the Jewish Yom Kippur holiday and most expect trading  activity to be subdued on Wednesday.       The euro, however, will be put to the test next week amid a  slew of significant events.      The ECB will hold its next policy meeting on Oct. 4 and U.S.  non-farm payrolls data, a key monthly market driver, is due on  Oct. 5.      This month the Federal Reserve announced a third round of  bond buying, so-called quantitative easing. The Fed said it will  continue buying bonds until it sees a marked labor improvement.      The euro should remain under pressure if Spain drags its  feet over requesting an international bailout. This must happen  in order for the ECB to begin buying its bonds and, until it  does, analysts say the euro is likely to weaken.      Last week, the euro hit a 4-1/2-month peak of $1.3169 on  optimism as a result of the ECB plan and after the Federal  Reserve announced aggressive quantitative easing earlier this  month to boost a sluggish U.S. economy.            GREECE STILL A CONCERN      Worries about the size of Greece's deficit also weighed on  the euro, with German's Der Spiegel magazine reporting it could  be 20 billion euros, nearly double previous estimates.      Spain, meanwhile, is expected to unveil new structural  reforms and its draft budget plan for 2013 this week, with  investors also awaiting results of stress tests on its banking  sector. A Moody's credit rating review of Spain is also  expected, and it could downgrade Spanish debt to junk status.      In the United States, economic data had initially buoyed the  dollar against the yen. U.S. home prices continued to rise in  July, the latest evidence that the recovery in the housing  market is on track.       Moreover, U.S. consumers' mood improved this month, with  confidence jumping to the highest in seven months as Americans  were more optimistic about the job market and income prospects.      The dollar hit a one-month high of 79.22 yen on Sept. 19  after the Bank of Japan announced further monetary easing. It  was last little changed at 77.80 yen.  
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