Euro
slides ahead of ECB; dollar at 11-year high
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[March 04, 2015]
By Patrick Graham
LONDON (Reuters) - The euro crashed through
support levels that had held for more than a month on Wednesday, hitting
a six-week low under pressure from the imminent launch of outright
quantitative easing by the European Central Bank.
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The dollar, bolstered by recent rises in U.S. government bond
yields, hit its highest since September 2003 against the basket of
currencies used to measure its broader strength.
There has been more momentum behind the greenback in the past week
after a month of mediocre data which had left it struggling to build
on six months of gains against all of its major currency peers.
Dealers said further progress against the euro on Wednesday was
likely to depend more on a rash of U.S. sentiment data due later in
the session than the ECB's policy meeting on Thursday.
"Its really the dollar side of the equation that is at stake at the
moment," said Daragh Maher, a strategist with HSBC in London. "The
ECB has told us what it is going to do so in that sense the euro is
on autopilot; it is hard for the (European) data to change
anything."
By 7 a.m. ET the euro was down 0.4 percent at $1.1129, having
dropped to $1.1115 earlier in the session. The dollar index was up
by a third of a percent at 95.761. <.DXY>.
Other moves saw the Swedish crown rise to a three month high of
9.2080, adding to gains in the previous day after deputy central
bank governor Kerstin af Jochnick said there was a risk of crown
gains due to the ECB's planned QE scheme.
The crown, though, was lower against the dollar at 8.2760.
The dollar index has gained about 5.7 percent so far this year,
helped by the U.S. economy's better performance against other major
world economic regions and relatively higher U.S. yields.
Its rise has slowed over the past month or so, however, as investors
have seen fewer catalysts to move the dollar higher given the
uncertainty over whether the U.S. Federal Reserve will start raising
interest rates by mid-year or wait a while longer.
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Economic data surprise indices run by HSBC and Citi both show euro
zone data beating expectations more often while U.S. numbers do the
opposite - one possible reason for the dollar's failure to take off
in February.
Against the yen, the greenback was just 0.1 percent lower at 119.63
yen, down from Tuesday's almost three-week high of 120.27 yen.
The Australian dollar got a slight lift as the market took comfort
in data showing the economy grew as expected last quarter, when the
risk had been for a softer outcome.
The Aussie dollar traded close to an intraday high of $0.7838, up
0.2 percent on the day.
"Australian GDP data were a bit softer than expected but that was
due to inventories and not a reason for fresh bearishness," said Kit
Juckes, a strategist with Societe Generale in London.
(Additional reporting by Francesco Canepa and Anirban Nag; Editing
by Toby Chopra)
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