Monday, September 24, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Euro declines to more than one-week low vs dollar, yen

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Euro declines to more than one-week low vs dollar, yen
Sep 24th 2012, 20:07

Mon Sep 24, 2012 4:07pm EDT

  * Euro falls after German Ifo disappoints      * Uncertainty on Spain, Greece also undermines euro      * BoJ intervention on radar as dollar falls versus yen        By Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss      NEW YORK, Sept 24 (Reuters) - The euro fell to its lowest in  more than a week against the dollar and yen on Monday as a weak  German business sentiment report and uncertainty about  debt-plagued Spain added to concerns about the euro zone's  slumping economy.      The drop in German business sentiment in September to its  lowest since early 2010 raised worries that Germany, the largest  euro zone economy, is succumbing to a downturn despite the  European Central Bank's recently announced bond-buying plan.         Spain is also adding to the euro zone's pain. Spanish  government bond yields rose on signs Madrid is making slow  progress toward asking for the international bailout that  markets are anticipating. Italian yields also rose.      "This is what was feared: after the ECB came in with their  bond-buying plan a couple of weeks ago, it would ease the sense  of urgency that is needed around this crisis," said Sean Cotton,  foreign exchange advisor, at Bank of the West in San Ramon,  California.       Many market participants also believe the euro is poised for  a pullback after a sharp rally in recent weeks that took the  common currency to a four-month high against the dollar at  $1.3169 on Sept. 17.      Data on Friday from the U.S. derivatives watchdog CFTC  showed speculators' net euro short positions shrank to their  lowest since November, having fallen to just above one-third of  the record peak reached in June.       The euro hit a session low of $1.2889, its lowest since  Sept. 13. It last traded at $1.2928, down 0.4 percent.       Initial support is seen at $1.2905, the 23.6 percent  retracement of the July to September rally, followed by its  200-day moving average, which comes in around $1.2828.      Against the yen, the euro last traded at 100.63 yen  , down 0.8 percent. It dropped to 100.33, a more than  one-week low.      The Munich-based Ifo think tank said its business climate  index, based on a monthly survey of some 7,000 firms, fell to  101.4 in September from 102.3 in August. A Reuters poll of 45  economists had forecast a slight rise to 102.5.      In the last few weeks, the euro has benefited from the  dollar's weakness following the Federal Reserve's announcement  of another round of monetary stimulus to boost the U.S. economy.      That rally in the euro seemed to have run out of steam.      "The initial investor enthusiasm following ... the Fed QE3  (quantitative easing) announcement has begun to wane as the more  intractable problems of the euro zone sovereign debt crisis  return to the front burner," said Samarjit Shankar, managing  director for global strategy at BNY Mellon in Boston.         SPANISH BUDGET      Madrid is expected to present its draft budget plan for 2013  this week and announce new structural reforms, while the results  of stress tests on the wobbly Spanish banking sector are also  due. These could set the stage for a full-scale bailout.      However, Economy Minister Luis de Guindos said on Saturday  Spain will not rush to seek external aid to finance its debt,  and EU officials said they did not expect Prime Minister Mariano  Rajoy to seek an assistance program before a regional election  in his native Galicia on Oct. 21.       Bank of the West's Cotton said euro zone politicians now  believe they don't have to seek aid immediately since the ECB is  providing a backstop anyway, but he added that the "euro zone  could be in even more trouble than before if they don't act  decisively and make needed changes."      Adding to pressure for Spain is the risk of a downgrade of  its sovereign debt rating to junk status by ratings agency  Moody's, which some expect this week, as well as a 27.5 billion  euro refinancing hump at the end of next month.       Further weighing on the euro was a possible delay in the  release of an EU/IMF report on whether Greece's debt is  manageable. That report, now likely to be released until after  Nov. 6, was originally expected next month.       The dollar also fell against the yen, trading at 77.84 yen  , down 0.4 percent.       Risk aversion firmly favored the yen but Japan might  intervene in the market should the yen gain further, traders  said. The Bank of Japan's easing last week is seen as paving the  way for such a move.  
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