Euro Continues To Threaten 1.2500

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Lucas
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Joined: Tue May 29, 2012 10:54 am

Euro Continues To Threaten 1.2500

Post by Lucas » Tue May 29, 2012 10:57 am

Talking Points

Euro: Spain To Recapitalize Bankia With Debt, ECB Keeps Asset Purchases On Hold
British Pound: BoE Drops Dovish Tone, Warns Of Sticky Price Growth
U.S. Dollar: Benefits From Headline-Drive Market, Consumer Confidence Misses Forecasts
Euro: Spain To Recapitalize Bankia With Debt, ECB Keeps Asset Purchases On Hold

The Euro pared the overnight advance to 1.2573 amid heightening finance costs across the European periphery sapped risk-taking behavior, while Italy sold EUR 8.5B in 6-month bills yielding 2.104%, which compares to the 1.772% offered in April. Meanwhile, Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said the government will now recapitalize Bankia with treasury debt rather than cash as region’s third-largest lender seeks a EUR 19B bailout, but it seems as though that the European Central Bank will carry its wait-and-see approach into the second-half of the year even as the governments operating under the fixed-exchange rate system become increasingly reliant on monetary support.

Indeed, ECB board member Ewald Nowotny talked down speculation for restoring the asset-purchase program, stating that the Governing Council ‘ has done a number of measures that were very helpful and efficient for the economy ,’ and went onto say that the ‘ the role of the ECB is in the field of liquidity, not solvency ’ as the central bank continues to endorse its current policy stance. As European policy makers continue to carry out a reactionary approach in tackling the risks surrounding the region, fears of Spanish bailout paired with the growing threat of a Greek exit continues to foster a bearish outlook for the single currency, but the pair appears to be carving out a short-term floor around the 1.2500 figure as the relative strength index continues to come off of the lows. We are waiting to see the RSI cross back above 30 to see a short-term correction take shape, but the headline-driven market may ultimately produce a fairly muted rebound in the exchange rate as European policy makers struggle to restore investor confidence.

thestreet.com

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