Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Euro gains on optimism about ECB debt buying plan

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Euro gains on optimism about ECB debt buying plan
Sep 5th 2012, 21:01

Wed Sep 5, 2012 5:01pm EDT

  * ECB may buy unlimited amount of govt debt-report      * Euro zone data gloomy      * Aussie skids to eight-week low          By Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss      NEW YORK, Sept 5 (Reuters) - The euro rallied across the  board on Wednesday on reports the European Central Bank may  purchase more government debt from troubled peripheral nations  of the euro zone to stem the region's banking crisis.      ECB President Mario Draghi is expected to reveal details of  the central bank's bond-buying program after a policy meeting on  Thursday. Bloomberg early on Wednesday reported that the ECB may  buy an unlimited amount of government bonds of debt-plagued  countries such as Spain and Italy, sparking the euro's gain.      A Reuters report, however, said the ECB's Governing Council  wanted to have some room for manoeuvre on its bond buying to be  able to decide spendi n g on a case to case basis.      Nevertheless, the Bloomberg report fuelled buying in the  euro against the greenback and commodity currencies such as the  Canadian and Australian dollars.       The ECB had been expected to be cautious about disclosing  the size of its bond buying, given opposition from Germany's  central bank.      Further adding to the rally was a report from Reuters saying  that the ECB was ready to waive seniority status on government  bonds it buys under the new program, which would mean private  investors would not rank lower in any restructuring of euro zone  sovereign debt. {ID:nL6E8K5IA9]      "There's cautious optimism on the eve of a much-anticipated  ECB meeting," said Joe Manimbo, senior market analyst at Western  Union Business Solutions in Washington.      In late afternoon trading, the euro was up 0.3 percent at  $1.2602, heading back toward a two-month high of $1.2636  touched on Friday. Traders, however said, volume was light on  Wednesday, which may be exacerbating price swings.        Analysts were sceptical that the ECB will announce something  significant after the Thursday's policy meeting.      "A question that remained unanswered is whether any new plan  by the ECB would be enticing enough for countries to sign up for  aid," said Manimbo.       "Central bank assistance to ease the debt crisis that comes  attached with conditions deemed too severe would dissuade  countries from seeking help."      The euro has risen from a two-year low of $1.2040 in late  July since Draghi pledged he would do everything to preserve the  currency, suggesting possible intervention in bond markets to  lower peripheral countries' borrowing costs.      He told European lawmakers on Monday that purchases of  short-term sovereign bonds to help debt-burdened countries would  not breach European Union rules, according to a recording  obtained by Reuters.              WEDNESDAY DATA      Data on Wednesday confirmed French and German services  sectors contracted in August, showing the economic rot was  spreading well beyond the periphery and raising the chances of  the ECB cutting interest rates in coming months.       Beyond the ECB meeting, investors are looking to U.S.  non-farm payrolls data on Friday. A  weaker-than-expected number could bolster expectations of more  quantitative easing by the Federal Reserve, perhaps later this  month.       The dollar was steady at 78.42 Japanese yen.      The Australian dollar hit an eight-week low against  the U.S. dollar on speculation the Reserve Bank of Australia  will cut interest rates to cushion the economy from falling  commodity prices. It was last down 0.4 percent at US$1.0190      The euro rose to its highest against the Swiss franc since  May 24. It was last at 1.2044 francs, up 0.3 percent.      Against the Australian dollar, the euro gained 0.7 percent  to A$1.2370. The euro zone common currency also  climbed versus the Canadian dollar, rising 0.7 percent to  C$1.2482.  
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