Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Euro Falls Against Dollar Before Report on European Spending


By Stanley White

Sept. 3 (Bloomberg) -- The euro fell to the lowest in more than seven months against the dollar before a report that may show European retail sales declined for a second month in July.

The 15-nation currency also approached the lowest in five months versus the yen on speculation the European Central Bank will signal this week it is concerned about growth in the region's economy. The pound traded near a two-year low against the dollar on concern the U.K is heading for a recession as house prices plunge. The Australian dollar fell after the government reported the slowest expansion in three years.

``The euro and pound will continue to be sold,'' said Hideki Amikura, deputy general manager of foreign exchange in Tokyo at Nomura Trust and Banking Co. Ltd., a unit of Japan's largest brokerage. ``The outlook for European economies has deteriorated a lot in a very short time span. It's only natural to speculate about when officials will have to lower rates.''

The euro declined to $1.4412, the lowest since Jan. 22, before trading at $1.4445 as of 7:11 p.m. in London from $1.4520 yesterday. It may drop to $1.44 today, Amikura said. The dollar was at 108.95 yen from 108.61 yen. The pound dropped to $1.7703, the lowest level since April 2006. The euro traded at 157.39 yen from 157.68 yen.

The Australian dollar slid to 82.39 U.S. cents, the lowest in almost a year, from 83.37 cents late yesterday in Asia. Australian gross domestic product expanded 0.3 percent in the second quarter, the slowest pace since 2004, the government reported today.

European Retail

European retail sales fell 2.1 percent in July from a year earlier, after a record 3.1 percent decline the previous month, according to the median forecast of 18 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. The European Union's statistics office, which started to compile the data in 1995, is scheduled to release the report today in Luxembourg.

The European Central Bank will hold its main refinancing rate at a seven-year high of 4.25 percent at its meeting tomorrow, according to all but one of the 53 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News.

``The euro seems poised to grind lower,'' said Mitsuru Sahara, senior currency sales manager in Tokyo at Bank of Tokyo- Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd., a unit of Japan's biggest publicly listed lender. ``Higher-yielding currencies are losing their luster because the economic outlook suggests interest rates in several countries are going to start falling.''

The euro may decline to $1.4430 today, he said.

Forecast Change

Standard Chartered Plc and BNP Paribas SA raised their forecasts for the U.S. currency yesterday. London-based Standard Chartered predicts the dollar will rise to $1.44 per euro by year-end and $1.36 by March 31, compared with previous forecasts of $1.49 and $1.42. BNP, based in Paris, forecasts the dollar will gain to $1.42 versus the euro and $1.71 against the pound by year-end, stronger than the old forecasts of $1.45 and $1.88.

The dollar rose against the yen on speculation a decline in oil prices will support economic growth in the world's largest energy consumer.

Crude oil for October delivery fell 0.5 percent to $109.20 a barrel, near a five-month low of $105.46 reached yesterday.

``The dropping commodity prices tend to benefit the dollar,'' said Magnus Prim, chief foreign-exchange strategist at Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken in Singapore. ``Even without that, focus has shifted to the weakness in the euro area. That hasn't fully been priced in yet.''

`Sterling Struggling'

The pound was at 81.48 pence per euro, near a record low of 81.64 pence reached yesterday. U.K. consumer confidence stayed at a four-year low in August, according to the findings of a survey published today by Nationwide Building Society, the nation's second-biggest mortgage lender. The Bank of England will keep its target lending rate unchanged at 5 percent tomorrow, according to all of the 61 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News.

U.K. inflation will reach about 5 percent in coming months and may slow to below the central bank's 2 percent target in two years if the benchmark rate remains unchanged, BOE Governor Mervyn King said Aug. 13.

``Sterling is struggling to shore up support ahead of the BOE meeting,'' analysts led by Mansoor Mohi-uddin, Zurich-based chief currency strategist at UBS AG, the world's second-largest currency trader, wrote in a research note yesterday. ``Sterling weakness will continue while the BOE remains trapped by above- target inflation.''

Gains in the dollar may be limited by speculation a weakening U.S. labor market will damp consumer spending.

U.S. nonfarm payrolls fell by 75,000 jobs in August, faster than the previous month's decline of 51,000, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey before the Labor Department releases the report Sept. 5.

``I don't think the U.S. fundamentals at all support the idea of a stronger U.S. dollar going into next year,'' said Clifford Bennett, chief economist at Sonray Capital Markets Ltd., in an interview with Bloomberg Television. ``The dollar is going to turn around at some point.''

To contact the reporter on this story: Stanley White in Tokyo at swhite28@bloomberg.net.

Last Updated: September 3, 2008 02:17 EDT

1 comments:

Anonymoussaid...

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