Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Euro nudges lower vs dollar ahead of Cyprus levy vote

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Euro nudges lower vs dollar ahead of Cyprus levy vote
Mar 19th 2013, 13:55

Tue Mar 19, 2013 9:55am EDT

  * Euro weak near 3-month low vs dollar on Cyprus problems      * Investors await vote on Cyprus bailout deal      * Little impact from better-than-expected German ZEW        By Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss      NEW YORK, March 19 (Reuters) - The euro edged lower for a  second straight session against the dollar on Tuesday as  investors nervously awaited a vote in Cyprus on a controversial  bank deposit levy that renewed fears about euro zone  instability.      A Cyprus government spokesman said a plan to levy taxes on  bank deposits, crucial for the country to secure financial aid,  was unlikely to be approved by parliament on Tuesday. The House  of Representatives was expected to meet at 1600 GMT.      Rejection of the measure would push the island closer to a  default and a banking collapse that could have repercussions  across the euro zone.       It could also inject fresh volatility into financial markets  and weigh on the euro. Safe-haven German bund were higher on  Tuesday while European stocks fell.      "The uncertain outlook for Cyprus carries potential negative  knock-on effects for other euro zone nations which should keep  near-term pressure on the single currency," said Joe Manimbo,  senior market strategist at Western Union Business Solutions in  Washington.      The single currency slipped 0.1 percent against the  dollar to $1.2940, holding within sight of Monday's three-month  low of $1.2882. Below that, support was expected around the  200-day moving average at $1.2874.       The euro briefly gained after a slightly  better-than-expected German ZEW economic sentiment survey, but  demand was hampered by worries about Cyprus.       Still, there were some market participants who remained  hopeful.      "The fact that we failed to break below support at $1.2880  is good sign," said Sebastien Galy, currency strategist, at  Societe Generale in new York. "It looks to me that there is  limited contagion at this point in time if you look at the bond  market."      Even though German bunds were higher, Spanish and Italian  bonds were little changed on the day. Spanish 10-year yields   were flat at 5.0 percent, while their Italian  equivalents were 3 basis points higher at 4.66  percent.       Some analysts said the market remains insulated by the  European Central Bank's as-yet untested bond-buying promise.      Against sterling, which is currently being bought as a  shelter in times of heightened uncertainty in the euro zone, the  euro hovered near a five-week low of 85.32 pence hit on Monday   to change hands at 85.64 on Tuesday.        The euro also retreated against the Swiss franc, dropping  0.3 percent on the day to 1.2214 francs.            UPHILL TASK      Analysts said the unprecedented plan to impose taxes on  citizens' savings in Cyprus, announced over the weekend, had  rattled savers in larger European countries also burdened by  heavy debts, like Spain and Italy.      As a result, the more liquid dollar and the Japanese yen,  often sought during times of financial instability and economic  stress, should remain supported.      UBS strategist Geoffrey Yu, however, said the euro looked  vulnerable but losses should be capped as long as investors did  not start withdrawing funds from other euro zone countries, or  rush to empty cash machines as they have done in Cyprus.      "We are not seeing huge queues at ATMs (cash machines) in  Italy and Spain ... that contagion is contained. We have revised  our one-month forecast in euro/dollar to $1.30," he said.      The dollar index, which measures the greenback  against a basket of currencies, was flat on the day at 82.710.       The dollar was up 0.1 percent on the day at 95.31 yen   with the Japanese currency likely to be driven by any comments  from incoming governor of the Bank of Japan Haruhiko Kuroda, who  assumes the post on Wednesday.      Expectations are huge for Kuroda to put in place an  aggressive monetary policy to try and lift Japan out of  deflation and which is likely to weaken the yen.        Market players said if the situation deteriorates in Cyprus  the safe-haven yen could regain ground, pushing the dollar  further away from last week's 3-1/2 year high of 96.71 yen.      Meanwhile, the U.S. economy continued to show outperformance  on Tuesday, with housing starts rising last month and new  permits for construction climbing to their highest in more than  four years.       The report did help boost the dollar against the yen.  
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