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CNBC: Euro slips across the board after ECB cuts rates
 
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The euro slumped broadly on Thursday, hitting a one-month low against the dollar, after the European Central Bank cut its main interest rate to a record low and reduced its deposit rate to zero to help tackle the euro zone debt crisis.

Analysts said although the market had been positioned for a 25 basis point cut in the ECB'S main refinancing rate, the cut in the deposit rate - effectively encouraging banks to lend funds to each other overnight - caught some by surprise.

Other investors, however, were hoping for more.

That latter view was reinforced after European Central Bank President Mario Draghi said at a press conference after the rate announcement that the ECB sees a weakening of growth for the euro zone and that downside risks to growth are materializing.

But the ECB's bond-buying program and other such crisis measures are strictly temporary, Draghi said, resisting pressures to reactivate the plan to ease funding costs for countries mired in the euro zone debt crisis.

"It sounds like, at the margin, the outlook has deteriorated from the ECB perspective," said Michael Woolfolk, senior currency strategist at BNY Mellon in New York. "By and large, it's a risk-off environment that will be positive for the dollar and negative for the euro."

The euro was last down 1.2 percent against the dollar at $1.2376, after falling as low as $1.2362.

Against the yen, the euro was last 1.1 percent lower at 98.93 yen.

The dollar posted a two-week high against the yen after U.S. employment data showed signs of hope for the labor market. The dollar was last up 0.1 percent at 79.92 yen.

Earlier in the session the euro briefly jumped after the Chinese central bank unexpectedly cut its benchmark interest rates in the latest attempt to protect the world's second-largest economy from signs of slowing growth.

But the main focus remained the ECB. Many market players said the rate cut would not tackle structural problems within the euro zone, and the single currency could come under further selling pressure.

"The quarter-point rate cut is less aggressive than some had expected given the extent of deterioration in the economies," said Omer Esiner, chief market analyst, Commonwealth Foreign Exchange, Washington D.C. "Draghi was overwhelmingly cautious, yet did not suggest new liquidity or policy measures being considered, so there is a risk of being behind the curve in addressing a lot of problems, which is negative for the euro."

Adding to pressure on the euro, surveys on Wednesday showed all of Europe's biggest economies are in recession or heading in that direction. Spain also paid higher premiums to sell debt on Thursday than at its previous auction.

EURO LOWER ON THE CROSSES

The euro came under pressure against growth-linked currencies with the Chinese rate cut seen as supporting perceived riskier assets. It fell to record lows both against the Australian dollar and the New Zealand currency.

Some analysts said although commodity currencies had benefited from an improvement in risk appetite after the EU summit deal, the longer-term outlook was clouded.

"The Australian dollar is likely to come under pressure as signs of a global slowdown continue to emerge and we see further warning signals coming from China," said Ian Stannard, head of European FX strategy at Morgan Stanley in London.

The Bank of England voted to restart its quantitative easing program with another 50 billion pound cash injection, a move that was widely anticipated by the market.

The euro fell to its lowest since May 16 against sterling, as the ECB rate cut and concerns about the currency bloc's debt crisis outweighed looser UK monetary policy.

Sterling was down 0.4 percent against the dollar.

The U.S. dollar recovered to trade around a two-week high against the yen after data showed the U.S. private sector added more jobs than expected in June. .

The government reported the number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment benefits last week fell by the most in two months, another hopeful sign for the struggling labor market. The government's closely watched monthly employment report will be released on Friday. .

"The ADP does suggest there is a risk for a upside surprise in tomorrow's payrolls report, which is good for the dollar," said Esiner of Commonwealth Foreign Exchange.

The dollar also climbed to a one-month high against the Swiss franc and was last up 1.1 percent at 0.9695.

(Reporting by Nick Olivari; Additional reporting by Julie Haviv in New York; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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