Home
Information Radio Network
News Commentaries
News Links
News Staff

Dollar Drops Again Against Euro
By: Administrative Account | Source: Reuters
December 15, 2003 4:06PM EST


By Manuela Badawy

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The dollar retested record lows against the euro on Monday after trimming gains made on the initial excitement over the capture of former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein (news - web sites) at the weekend.

 "The euro picked back up. The Saddam news affected overnight trade but the U.S. trading session has been underweight," said Tim Mazanec, senior foreign exchange strategist at Investors Bank and Trust Company.

"The trend of dollar weakness/euro strength is once again picking up and the geopolitical news is having limited effect in U.S. trade," Mazanec said.

The euro was slightly softer near $1.2287 against the dollar, off its record high above $1.23 reached on Friday.

The Treasury Department (news - web sites) said on Monday foreigners' net purchases of U.S. financial securities rose to $27.65 billion in October from $4.19 billion in September.

However, analysts said overall inflows were below what is needed to fund the U.S. current account deficit.

Last month's numbers, showing foreigners turned a cold shoulder to U.S. assets in September, sent the dollar reeling.

Concerns over the sustainability of the current account gap mean flows in and out of U.S. assets are a key focus of currency traders. So far, a recovering economy has done little to help the United States fund its widening current account deficit. The dollar has lost over 18 cents against the euro this year and nine cents in about five weeks.

"The capital flows had a temporary effect but the euro looks like it's coming back and so is the yen. The long-run fundamental story has not changed. The dollar is still in a declining trend and people think this is an opportunity to get into a short-dollar position," said Michael Rosenberg, Managing Director and Global head of foreign exchange research at Deutsche Bank Securities in New York.

The dollar stood at 107.79 yen , slightly firmer than in late Friday New York trade, according to Reuters data.

The dollar was up 0.18 percent against the Swiss franc at 1.2637 francs .

The dollar had gained more than a cent on Monday from last week's record low against the euro, after news of Saturday's capture of Saddam.

"Saddam Hussein's capture did not change the dollar bears' perception that the growing U.S. current account deficit, combined with expectations that the Fed would keep rates on hold at very low levels in the first half, would continue to weigh on the dollar," said Margaret Browne, currency strategist at HSBC.

Last week the Fed left interest rates unchanged at a 45-year low of 1 percent and signaled they would not raise them any time soon. This compares to rates in the euro zone of 2 percent, 3.75 percent in the UK and 5.25 percent in Australia.

The greenback softened further after the New York Fed's Empire State survey of business conditions eased to 37.4 in December, still a strong number but lower than the revised record high of 40.1 seen in November.

Japan's top financial diplomat, Zembei Mizoguchi, said on Monday that Saddam's capture would help reduce global security risks and encourage investors to focus on "strong" U.S. economic fundamentals. (Additional reporting by Burton Frierson in London)

Email this Article Printer Friendly Version

Related Articles
- Democrats Plot Using War Intel Against Bush
- Illinois researchers create world's fastest transistor ... again
- North Carolina Pastor Goes to Battle Against GLSEN
- Senate's GOP Majority Again Goes Wobbly on Judicial Nominees
- Dollar Drops to Record Low Versus Euro as Asset Purchases Fall
- Yen Falls Against Dollar as Bank of Japan Sells Its Currency
- Dollar Falls on Concern Investment Will Decline After Bombings
- Liberal court reinstates lawsuit against gun maker
- Christian Educator Wins Suit Against DePauw Univ.
- European Officials Refuse to Release Anti-Semitism Report
- Dollar Falls Versus Euro on Concern About Future U.S. Growth
- Czech warns Europe of 'dream world' woes
- Hundreds rally against Oregon tax increase
- Euro zone in crisis after deficit deal
- Dollar Drops Against Euro; U.S. May Struggle to Attract Capital
- Two million flu cases expected in France as epidemic hits Europe
- OPEC Agrees to Keep Oil Targets, Meet Again on Cuts
- Brussels considers imposing currency controls on Euro
- Euro at new dollar high as ECB holds rates
- Dollar Weakens as U.S. Economy Adds Fewer Jobs Than Predicted
- Dollar Falls for Fourth Week Against the Euro on Rate Concern
- Dollar Drops to Record Against Euro, 11-Year Low Versus Pound
- The Disappearing Dollar
- Capture of Brutal Kidnapper Boosts Wider Campaign Against Terrorists
- FBI Won't Investigate Hate Crime Against Church
- Dollar Falls Against Euro, Yen as Consumer Confidence Declines
- Bush Signs Bill Calling for Sanctions Against Syria
- Euro Reaches All-Time High in Trading; Again
- Dollar Drops to Record Against the Euro on U.S. Rate Concern
- European Union’s constitution on hold
- Dollar Weakens to Record; U.S. Says Terrorism Risks Increasing
- GOP sources: Rudy 'to run against Hillary'
- Black Christmas under threat from the dollar
- Euro: New Record High vs. the Dollar
- Dollar Declines to Record, Poised for Worst Year Against Euro
- British Airways Again Cancels Flight to Washington
- NEA does it again, with your tax dollars.
- British Pound Gains vs Dollar as BOE Expected to Raise Rates
- Dollar Drops Against Euro, Yen; Fed's Bernanke Sees No `Crisis'
- Euro Falls First Day in 4 as ECB May Signal Concern Over Gains
- Computer companies warn against interfering with moving jobs overseas
- Dollar Falls for a 9th Week Versus Euro as Job Growth Stalls
- Terror-Alert Level Drops, But Not for 'Certain Locales'
- Euro Declines as ECB Expresses Concern About Currency's Gains
- Poll shows most against same-sex marriage
- Dollar Has Biggest Gain Against Euro in More Than Four Months
- Kimberly-Clark Combines North American, Europe Units
- The Brady Bunch Visits Wonderland Once Again
- Euro Surges; EU Ministers Signal They're Not Close to Selling
- Born-again president nutcases
- U.S. Stocks Fall, Led by Computer-Related Shares; Lucent Drops
- Marchers for Life Present Unified Front Against Abortion
- European Mars Express Confirms Ice on Red Planet
- Dozens dead as heavy winds, bitter cold lash southeastern Europe
- Euro Gains on Dollar on German Confidence, ECB View of Rates
- Lawsuit Against Jesse Jackson Gets the Green Light

Home| Search| Email Administrator| Login