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Euro Slides to Record Low vs Dollar on Speculation ECB Won't Buy Currency By Malcolm Foster
Euro Falls to Low vs Dollar; ECB May Not Buy Euros (Update3) (Updates rates.)
New York, June 2 (Bloomberg) -- The euro fell to its lowest level against the dollar after government officials signaled the European Central Bank won't bolster the single currency amid sluggish European economic growth. ''I can't see any reason for intervention,'' said Ernst Welteke, who will become head of the Bundesbank in September. ''What is causing the weakness of the euro means intervention wouldn't work,'' he said in a speech in Dusseldorf. Many traders had speculated in recent days the ECB would buy the euro to halt its 11.3 percent decline this year.
The euro fell as low as $1.0329 from $1.0448 yesterday. It was recently at $1.0348. The dollar rose to 121.48 yen from 120.72 yesterday. ''The ECB doesn't want to stand in front of'' a tumbling euro, said Stanley Cherny, who helps manages $1 billion in global bonds at Hartford Investment Management in Hartford, Connecticut. Besides, ''if their currency is weakening, that should help their economies'' by boosting exporters' income.
ECB President Wim Duisenberg said the euro ''has clear potential for stronger value.'' Even so, his remarks failed to convince traders that the bank wants to halt the euro's slide. ''You'd think that with the euro at all-time lows, he'd be more adamant in its defense,'' said Hugh Walsh, a senior trader at Commerzbank AG. ''Interest rate and growth differentials favor the dollar. It's tough to buy the euro.''
Lacking central bank purchases, the euro could fall to $1.00 as European economies slump and U.S. growth fuels expectations for higher interest rates, traders said. Walsh sees it falling to parity with the dollar within a week.
Little Concern
Klaus Gretschmann, chief international economic adviser to German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, further damped speculation that the ECB may soon intervene by saying that as long as the euro stays above $1.03, there is no ''cause for concern.'' ''They don't mind it being weak; it helps exporters,'' said Mark Cox, who helps manages $300 million of stocks at Pinnacle International Management. ''A BMW selling at $60,000 in the U.S. will translate into more euros'' when revenue is brought home.
Against the mark, which preceded the euro as Europe's centerpiece, the dollar rose as high as 1.8934 marks, its highest level in almost 10 years. When the dollar rose as high as 1.8905 on Aug. 6, 1997, traders said the Bundesbank sold dollars to buoy the mark.
The European Commission, the European Union's executive agency, projects that economic growth in 11-nation single currency zone will slow to 2.2 percent this year from 3.0 percent last year. The U.S. economy, meanwhile, grew at a 4.1 percent annual pace in the first quarter, extending its growth into a ninth year.
The ECB on April 8 cut its benchmark refinancing rate to 2.5 percent from 3 percent in an attempt to stimulate growth. The Federal Reserve said at its last policy meeting that it is leaning toward raising the benchmark U.S. rate from the current 4.75 percent. ''If people start talking more about raising interest rates in the U.S., that may push (the euro) to parity'' with the dollar, Cox said. ''There's a magnetic force pulling it to one-to- one. It becomes almost self-fulfilling.''
Kosovo
Traders also sold euros on concern that negotiations to end the war in Kosovo may be delayed. The euro is down almost 5 percent since NATO's bombing started March 24, amid concern that paying for the effort and housing refugees will make it harder for euro-region countries to end an economic slowdown.
The euro isn't going to recover until ''the U.S. economy comes off the boil,'' said Clark McGinn, head of currency sales at Royal Bank of Scotland. He said it will take ''a perception that Europe is tackling its structural problems and good news out of the Balkans'' to turn the euro higher.
Strategists and traders estimate that the euro could gain as much as three cents if the conflict is quickly resolved. ''If we were to reach a cease-fire in Kosovo tomorrow, one which people believed would last,'' the euro could rally as high as $1.07 to $1.0750, said Jim O'Neill, the chief currency economist at Goldman, Sachs & Co.
Among the world's most widely traded currencies, the euro is the third worst performing versus the dollar this year, after the Brazilian real and Danish krone.
Japan Job Plan
In earlier trading, the dollar fell against the yen on speculation Japan will increase government spending to alleviate record unemployment and boost growth.
The government said it will release details June 11 of a package aimed at creating jobs and lowering April's 4.8 percent unemployment rate. Any steps that help drag the economy out of its worst recession in half a century may help the yen pare this year's 5.7 percent decline against the dollar.
Still, traders said the yen won't benefit much until there's evidence that new measures are taking effect. ''Any package needs time to prove that it's working,'' said Christoph Benz, a trader at Bayerische HypoVereinsbank in Munich. ''The dollar is likely to stay above 119 yen for now.''
The Japanese budget -- which may allocate as much as 10 trillion yen ($80.6 billion) for spending on new programs -- may also include more public works spending and funds to combat Japan's low birth rate, according to legislators.
The measures are slated for release the day before finance ministers and central bank officials from the Group of Seven biggest industrial nations meet June 12 in Cologne, Germany.
Elsewhere, the British pound fell to $1.6046 from $1.6121 yesterday. The dollar rose to 1.5367 Swiss francs from 1.5242 and declined to 1.4796 Canadian dollars from 1.4835 yesterday.
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