BLBG:Euro Trades Near 11-Month Low Before Italy, Germany, Spain Auction Bonds Q
The euro traded 0.2 percent from an 11-month low as European nations prepare to sell bonds amid concern the regionâs debt crisis is far from resolution.
The dollar held gains from yesterday against most of its 16 major counterparts after the Federal Reserve said the U.S. economy is maintaining its expansion and refrained from taking new action to lower borrowing costs, easing concern policy makers are devaluing the worldâs reserve currency. The yen was near the highest level in more than two months versus the 17- nation euro as Asian equities dropped, boosting demand for safer assets.
âItâs hard to see a positive scenario for the euro,â said Kumiko Gervaise, an analyst in Tokyo at Gaitame.com Research Institute Ltd., a unit of Japanâs largest online currency margin-trading company. âA bad result at debt auctions will be a selling catalyst for the euro.â
The euro traded little changed at $1.3035 as of 1:37 p.m. in Tokyo from $1.3037 yesterday in New York, when it touched $1.3009, the lowest since Jan. 12. The yen fetched 101.63 per euro from 101.68, after rising to 101.47 yesterday, the strongest since Oct. 4. The dollar was little changed at 77.97 yen.
The MSCI Asia Pacific Index (MXAP) of shares fell for a second day, sliding 0.7 percent. The Standard & Poorâs 500 Index lost 0.9 percent in New York yesterday after German Chancellor Angela Merkel rejected raising the upper limit of funding for Europeâs permanent bailout mechanism.
Merkel told coalition lawmakers that the 500 billion-euro ($652 billion) cap on Europeâs planned permanent fund will stay in place, two officials with knowledge of the discussion said.
European Debt
Italy is scheduled to auction as much as 3 billion euros of debt maturing in 2016 today, while Germany plans to sell 5 billion euros of two-year notes. Spain will offer debt maturing in 2016, 2020, and 2021 tomorrow.
âThe economy has been expanding moderately, notwithstanding some apparent slowing in global growth,â the Federal Open Market Committee said in a statement at the conclusion of its meeting yesterday in Washington. âWhile indicators point to some improvement in overall labor market conditions, the unemployment rate remains elevated.â
Policy makers left unchanged their statement that economic conditions are likely to warrant âexceptionally lowâ interest rates âat least through mid-2013.â The central bank lowered its target overnight interest rate to a range of zero to 0.25 percent in December 2008.
âBright Signsâ
Industrial production probably increased 0.1 percent last month, following a 0.7 percent gain in October, according to the median estimate of economists in a Bloomberg News survey before the data tomorrow. Gauges of manufacturing from the Fed Banks of Philadelphia and New York may also point to expansion within those regions, economists said before the figures are released this week.
âIâm bullish on the dollar,â said Marito Ueda, senior managing director in Tokyo at FX Prime Corp., a currency margin company. âWe can see some bright signs for the U.S. economy.â
The dollar has appreciated 3.3 percent in the past month, the best performance among 10 currencies tracked by Bloomberg Correlation-Weighted Indexes. The euro has fallen 1.8 percent and the yen has advanced 1.9 percent.
The Australian dollar was near a two-week low versus its U.S. counterpart after Reserve Bank Deputy Governor Ric Battellino said a European slowdown may weigh on the local economy.
âIf the European economy were to slow markedly over the next year or so, Australia would be affected,â Battellino said in Sydney today. âIt is also likely, however, that if that were to eventuate, the exchange rate of the Australian dollar would fall, as it has when global growth has weakened in the past.â
The so-called Aussie was little changed at $1.0016 from yesterday when it dropped as low as 99.80 U.S. cents, the weakest since Nov. 30.
To contact the reporters on this story: Monami Yui in Tokyo at myui1@bloomberg.net; Masaki Kondo in Singapore at mkondo3@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Rocky Swift at rswift5@bloomberg.net