Economic Calendar

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Dollar Rises to One-Year High Against Euro on Growth Outlook

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By Agnes Lovasz and Ron Harui

Sept. 11 (Bloomberg) -- The dollar rose to the highest in a year against the euro on speculation that economic growth in Europe will be slower than in the U.S., prompting the region's central bank to lower interest rates.

The U.S. currency climbed for a second day as traders raised bets that the European Central Bank will cut borrowing costs before a government report tomorrow likely to show industrial production in the euro area shrank. New Zealand's dollar dropped to its lowest level since October 2006 after Alan Bollard, governor of the nation's central bank, reduced interest rates by more than economists expected.

``We've got this dollar strength for several weeks now that is driving currency markets and the fundamental picture is underpinning this,'' said Lutz Karpowitz, a currency strategist in Frankfurt at Commerzbank AG, Germany's second-biggest lender. ``The euro-zone economy is going into recession. This is a growth-differential story.''

The U.S. currency climbed to $1.3933 per euro, the strongest since Sept. 18, 2007, before trading at $1.3943 as of 8:35 a.m. in London from $1.3998 yesterday in New York. The Japanese yen advanced to 149.27 per euro, the highest since Nov. 2, 2006, and was last at 149.52, from 150.75. It also gained to 107.27 per dollar from 107.70.

The dollar will rise in coming days to $1.3830 against the euro, a so-called resistance level that may trigger orders to sell the U.S. currency, Karpowitz said.

The New Zealand dollar declined to as low as 64.62 U.S. cents before trading at 64.75 cents, down 2.2 percent from yesterday. The Reserve Bank of New Zealand cut its benchmark interest rate by half a percentage point to 7.5 percent, saying the economy is in a recession.

Risk Aversion

The ICE's Dollar Index touched 80.25 today, the highest since September 2007, when the U.S. central bank began cutting the target rate for overnight lending between banks from 5.25 percent to 2 percent to avoid a recession. The index, a gauge measuring the dollar against the currencies of six U.S. trading partners, reached a low of 70.698 on March 17.

The European Commission said yesterday the euro region's economy will probably stagnate this quarter after shrinking the previous three months for the first time since the currency's debut in 1999. It cut its 2008 growth forecast to 1.3 percent, from 1.7 percent. By contrast, the median in a Bloomberg News survey of 84 economists was for U.S. growth of 1.7 percent.

Volatility Rises

The yen rose against all 16 of the most-active currencies on speculation that widening subprime-mortgage losses will hurt earnings of U.S. companies, reducing demand for so-called carry trades.

In carry trades, investors get funds in a country with low borrowing costs and buy assets where returns are higher. Japan's target lending rate is 0.5 percent, compared with 7 percent in Australia. The risk is that currency swings erase profits.

``Investors in Japan are in risk-aversion mode, so they're buying the yen,'' said Ryohei Muramatsu, manager of Group Treasury Asia in Tokyo at Commerzbank AG. ``The economy also is doing poorly'' so the yen may appreciate to 107.00 against the dollar today.

The currency gained for a fourth day against the euro after implied volatility on one-month euro options versus the yen rose to 16.94 percent yesterday, the highest since March 18. It was at 16.61 percent today.

The yen stayed higher after a government report showed Japanese machinery orders fell for a second month in July, signaling manufacturers expect the global slowdown to crimp demand into next year.

The European Union's statistics office in Luxembourg will probably say tomorrow that industrial output in the 15 nations fell 0.2 percent in July after a revised 0.2 percent decline in June, according to a Bloomberg News survey of economists.

Growth Outlook

``The euro is likely to extend its adjustment lower,'' said Saburo Matsumoto, senior manager of foreign-exchange sales in Tokyo at Sumitomo Trust & Banking Co., Japan's fifth-largest publicly traded bank by market value. ``The euro-zone economy is facing a recession, so a weaker currency could provide some relief to exports.''

Europe's single currency may weaken to 147.50 yen in the next few days, Matsumoto forecast.

Traders are betting that the ECB will cut its 4.25 percent benchmark interest rate by 42 basis points over the next 12 months, up from 30 basis points a week earlier, according to a Credit Suisse Group index based on overnight swaps.

Implied volatility on the dollar versus the most actively traded currencies was at 11.55 percent after touching 12 percent, the highest since April, according to the JPMorgan Volatility index. The gauge of perceived price fluctuation in the dollar reached 9.27 percent on Aug. 4, the lowest this year.

To contact the reporters on this story: Agnes Lovasz in London at alovasz@bloomberg.net; Ron Harui in Singapore at rharui@bloomberg.net


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