MW: Dollar gains, euro falls as ECB’s Stark steps down
Traders cast on Group of Seven gathering of finance ministers
By Myra P. Saefong and William L. Watts, MarketWatch
SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) — The dollar rose Friday, with the euro under further pressure after the European Central Bank said Juergen Stark, a member of the Executive Board and Governing Council, will step down amid reports of disagreements over the bank’s bond-buying program.
Traders also awaited news from a weekend meeting of Group of Seven finance ministers currently underway in Marseille, France.
The dollar index DXY +0.91% , which measures the U.S. unit against a basket of six major rivals, rose to 76.967, up from 76.284 late Thursday. Earlier, the index touched a high of 77.052.
The euro EURUSD -1.16% , meanwhile, continued to grind lower after breaching the $1.40 level on Thursday. The euro bought $1.3716 in recent action, down from $1.3884 in late North American trading Thursday.
The ECB said Friday that Stark was leaving his post by the end of the year for “personal reasons.” But news reports have tied the move to disagreements over the bank’s bond-buying program. Read more about Stark’s resignation.
“Stark’s resignation suggests there is a major policy split and that the doves seems to be winning out, which is [euro] negative,” said Brian Dolan, chief currency strategist at Forex.com, in emailed comments.
Overall, the weakness in the euro is “mostly a continuation of the risk-off selling we’ve been seeing all week, as pessimism over the outlook intensifies,” he said. “Going into the weekend, there may also be some additional selling of risk assets on the potential for a terror attack on the 10th anniversary of 9/11.”
G-7 meets
With Thursday’s speeches from President Barack Obama and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke out of the way, “we now shift focus to the G-7 meeting,” said Adam Cole, global head of foreign-exchange strategy at RBC Capital Markets.
“Expectations of anything material coming out of the meeting have gradually deflated in recent days,” he noted, with officials quoted as saying no communique will be issued at the conclusion of the meeting.
Still, there may be some “residual hope” that officials “will put some meat onto their Aug. 9 pledge to ‘take all necessary measures to support financial stability and growth in a spirit of close cooperation, but specifics seem increasingly unlikely,” Cole said.
Overall market reaction to Obama’s jobs speech late Thursday night was restrained, analysts said. Obama urged a $440 billion package of tax cuts and other incentives he said would “jolt” the largest global economy back into growth.
The shared currency came under pressure after Jean-Claude Trichet, president of the European Central Bank, signaled that the bank’s cycle of interest-rate hikes had likely come to an end amid a moderating inflation outlook and intensifying downside risks to growth.
“We would not regard this as an indication that the ECB is about to ease, only that they are likely to remain on hold,” said Adrian Schmidt, currency strategist at Lloyds TSB in London. “But the continued concern about Greece maintains the negative euro tone.”
Also Friday, the British pound GBPUSD -0.30% traded at $1.5901 from $1.5965 late Thursday.
The dollar rose to 77.75 yen versus the Japanese currency USDJPY +0.29% , up from ¥77.52.