CHAIRMAN: DR. KHALID BIN THANI AL THANI
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: DR. KHALID BIN MUBARAK AL-SHAFI

Business / Stock Market

Euro sinks close to 12-year low versus dollar

Published: 10 Mar 2015 - 03:29 pm | Last Updated: 16 Jan 2022 - 06:57 pm

 


London--The euro tumbled Tuesday towards a 12-year dollar low, hit by eurozone stimulus, growing US rate hike speculation and Greek debt concerns, dealers said.
In morning London deals, the European single currency sank to $1.0735 -- the lowest level since mid-April 2003. The region's stock markets were lower.
"The US dollar scored multi-year highs ... amid starkly diverging outlooks for interest rates globally," said analyst Daniel Sugarman at trading firm ETX Capital.
The shared eurozone unit continues to flounder one day after the European Central Bank launched its 1.1-trillion-euro ($1.2-trillion) quantitative easing (QE) stimulus "bazooka".
The dollar neared an eight-year high against the yen as dealers bet on an interest rate hike from the Federal Reserve after bright US payrolls data.
The greenback surged in Asian trading hours to a high of 122.03 yen, a level not seen since July 2007. It later stood at 121.65 yen in London.
"Renewed upward momentum for the US dollar in the near-term has been reinforced by the stronger than expected US employment report for February which has supported investor expectations that the Fed remains on course to begin raising rates from the middle of this year," said economist Derek Halpenny at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ.
- Record-low bond yields -
Meanwhile, the yield on German, Italian and Spanish 10-year government bonds fell to new record lows on the ECB bond-buying programme to combat deflation and boost growth.
The rate of return to investors on 10-year German government bonds fell to 0.279 percent from 0.312 percent on Monday.
The yield on 10-year Italian government bonds fell to 1.220 percent from 1.280 percent and those of Spain to 1.231 percent from 1.275 percent.
Europe's main stock markets fell into the red, mirroring losses in Asia, as concerns lingered over Greek debt talks, while official data showed fresh weakness in economic powerhouse China.
In late morning deals on Monday, London's benchmark FTSE 100 index of leading companies slid 1.15 percent to 6,797.60 points.
Frankfurt's DAX 30 shed 0.82 percent to 11,487 points and the CAC 40 index in Paris lost 0.86 percent to 4,894.70 points compared with Monday's close.
"European equity markets are ... moderately lower this morning (on) renewed concerns that Greece might be running out of money soon," said analyst Markus Huber at London-based broker Peregrine & Black.
"With negotiations between Greece and the Eurogroup finance ministers still not having yielded a result and time is running out fast, Greece appears once again destined to take centre-stage."

AFP