Breaking News Stories
These are news stories breaking after the publishing of this Word
from.
–The Euro...The New World Currency?
Dollar Slumps to Record Low Versus
Euro on Bear Stearns Losses
By David McIntyre and Stanley White
The dollar fell to a record low against the euro and dropped versus the
yen after Bear Stearns Cos. reported hedge fund losses, fueling
speculation investors will spurn U.S. assets as the economy slows.
The yen also rose against the euro, British pound and New Zealand dollar
as investors scaled back carry trades, where they buy higher-yielding
securities with money borrowed in Japan. Financial industry losses
caused by subprime mortgage defaults may be addressed by Federal Reserve
Chairman Ben S. Bernanke when he testifies to Congress today.
``The subprime woes may weigh on the broader U.S. economy,'' said Yuji
Saito, head of the foreign-exchange sales department at Societe Generale
SA in Tokyo. ``There's a bias for selling the dollar.''
The dollar declined to an all-time low of $1.3833 against the euro from
$1.3781 in New York yesterday, and traded at $1.3809 at 7:47 a.m. in
London. It dropped to 121.71 yen from 122.34. The yen rose to 168.09 per
euro from 168.59. The U.S. currency may decline to $1.3830 per euro and
121.50 yen today, Saito said.
The dollar fell against 13 of the 16 most-active currencies today after
Bear Stearns told investors in one of its hedge funds they won't get any
money back. It reached a 26-year low of $2.0548 against the pound and
weakened to 87.85 cents against the Australian dollar, the lowest since
February 1989.
Taking a Hit
Defaults on loans by homeowners with poor credit histories have deepened
a housing slump that threatens to restrain growth in the world's biggest
economy. U.S. data today will show builders broke ground at an annual
pace of 1.45 million new homes last month, down from 1.474 million in
May, according to a Bloomberg survey.
Interest-rate futures today showed 30 percent odds the Fed will lower
borrowing costs from 5.25 percent in December, up from a 21 percent
chance yesterday. Bernanke delivers his semi-annual testimony on the
U.S. economy to the House at 10 a.m.
``Sentiment for the dollar is taking a hit,'' said Masahiro Sato, joint
general manager of the treasury division at Mizuho Trust & Banking Co.
in Tokyo. ``Bernanke will try to sound reassuring. He can't say anything
definitively because even the Fed doesn't know what's going to happen
with subprime loans. Growing expectations for a rate cut hurt the
dollar.''
The U.S. currency may fall to $1.40 against the euro this month, he
said.
New Stage
The Fed's trade-weighted dollar index this week fell to the lowest since
its inception in 1971. The U.S. Trade Weighted Major Currency Index,
measuring the dollar's performance versus seven currencies, fell to a
record low of 77.24 on July 16 and was at 77.29 yesterday, down 1.8
percent for the year. The central bank's broad dollar index, which
includes 26 currencies, dropped to the lowest since July 1997.
``Breaking through those levels marks a new stage of the week dollar
trend,'' said Koji Fukaya, senior currency strategist in Tokyo at
Deutsche Securities. ``The dollar's depreciation may accelerate.''
The yen recovered from a 21-year low against the New Zealand dollar to
trade at 96.50 from 96.63. It rebounded from a 15-year trough against
the pound to 249.95 from 250.40 late yesterday.
Investors have favored New Zealand and the U.K. for carry trades because
the two countries have interest rates as much as 7.5 percentage points
higher than Japan's.
``The yen is rising on an unwinding in carry trades,'' said Tsutomu
Soma, a bond and currency dealer at Okasan Securities Co. in Tokyo.
``Bear Stearns latest woes are sparking risk aversion. This isn't just
about Bear Stearns. Other hedge funds may be suffering just as much.''
The yen may rise to 121.70 per dollar today, Soma said.
Wait Until September
Any gains in the yen may be limited by speculation the Bank of Japan
will delay raising interest rates while it gauges the impact of subprime
loan defaults. The U.S. is Japan's largest export market.
Some BOJ board members said it's necessary to watch the U.S. housing
market, according to minutes released today from a meeting held June
14-15. Some policy makers also said lower oil prices are placing
``stronger downward pressure'' on consumer prices, the minutes showed.
The central bank's nine board members voted unanimously at that meeting
to leave interest rates at 0.5 percent. The BOJ decided 8-1 to keep
policy on hold at a meeting July 12.
``The market has priced in a rate increase in August, but the BOJ may
not move until September,'' said Kengo Suzuki, a currency strategist at
Shinko Securities Co. in Tokyo. ``The minutes show more uncertainty
about the U.S. economy and Japanese inflation. The yen could be sold''
to 124 against the dollar and 174 per euro by year-end, he said.
To contact the reporter on this story: David McIntyre in Sydney at
dmcintyre2@bloomberg.net;
Stanley White in Tokyo at
swhite28@bloomberg.net
|