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NEW YORK, Dec 20: The dollar stormed back on Friday from steep losses on the
euro earlier in the week after a massive rescue announced for two of the Big
Three US automakers eased worries about the world’s biggest economy.
The euro sank to 1.3913 dollars, down sharply from 1.4268 dollars a day earlier.
The greenback held nearly steady against the Japanese currency at 89.32 yen from
89.48 on Thursday.
The dollar was helped by US officials announcing a $13.4 billion rescue loan for
General Motors and Chrysler, requiring tough reforms, in a move aimed at staving
off an economic calamity.
The carmaker bailout will be positive for the dollar in the short term,”said
Geoff Kendrick, a currency strategist at UBS in London.
The yen held up despite the Bank of Japan saying it was cutting the benchmark
rate of borrowing from 0.3 per cent to 0.1 per cent, following a wave of global
interest rate cuts.
Japanese leaders had supported a rate cut, partly in hopes that it would bring
down the yen, which soared to a 13-year high against the greenback this week.
But dealers said the cut was largely symbolic as rates were already low.
Heading into next week, I can’t see a big change in the trend of a stronger yen
against the dollar, said Hideaki Inoue, chief manager of forex trading at
Mitsubishi UFJ Trust and Banking Corp.
This week, the dollar has taken a beating from both the yen and the euro after
the US Federal Reserve slashed interest rates to a range of zero to 0.25 per
cent in a bid to reverse the dire economic situation.
The euro reached $1.4719 on Thursday, which was the highest point since
September 25.The single currency was also undermined Friday by news that German
producer prices fell by 1.5 per cent in November from the previous month, the
biggest monthly drop since the data was first compiled in 1949.
This is good news for the country’s economy, however the question remains how
quickly such a measure can be passed and implemented after the new president
takes office as the US economy cannot afford to wait too long for such
stimulatory measures, he said.
In late New York trade, the dollar stood at 1.1035 Swiss francs after 1.0817
Thursday.
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