Euro shivers after Draghi’s comments

File picture: Lee Jae-Won

File picture: Lee Jae-Won

Published Nov 7, 2014

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Tokyo - The euro struggled to recover against the dollar in Asia on Friday after hitting a more than two-year low in New York as the head of the European Central Bank said he was prepared to unveil more measures to kickstart the eurozone economy.

In Tokyo, the single currency fetched $1.2378 against $1.2371 in New York, where it fell below $1.24 for the first time since August 2012. It was also at 142.63 yen from 142.47 yen in US trade but is sharply down from the 143.20 yen earlier on Thursday in Tokyo.

The dollar bought 115.23 yen, compared with 115.16 yen in New York, continuing its uptrend after last Friday's surprise announcement by the Bank of Japan to ramp up its own bond-buying programme.

“The euro has been under pressure, mainly in reaction to rising ECB easing expectations,” Credit Agricole said.

On Wednesday, ECB president Mario Draghi signalled the bank was ready to introduce fresh measures such as asset-buying - or quantitative easing (QE) - to counter deflation and boost growth in the ailing eurozone.

“Should it become necessary to further address risks of too prolonged a period of low inflation, the governing council is unanimous in its commitment to using additional unconventional instruments within its mandate,” Draghi said.

Still, the he shied away from promoting a massive monetary easing plan, as the Fed exits its own quantitative easing scheme and after the Bank of Japan last week inflated its already hefty stimulus package.

“It must still be noted that (Draghi) failed to make a bigger case of sovereign QE,” Credit Agricole said.

The dollar was a touch higher against the yen after dipping at one point on Thursday on profit-taking. The greenback has soared against the Japanese unit since last week's BoJ decision, which will essentially see it print money.

The focus is now on the release later in the day of the US Labour Department's jobs report for October, a key indicator of the health of the world's largest economy and the Fed's timeline for raising interest rates. - Sapa-AFP

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