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Dollar Plummets To Eight Month Low Against Euro

2008-01-07来源:
  因盈余报告令投资者对美国经济成长前景提出质疑并导致资金流往风险性小的国债与黄金市场,美元对欧元汇率10月21日跌至八个月来低点。

The US dollar slumped to an eight-month low against the euro, before regaining some strength, amid concerns about the US economy and a widening American trade deficit.

At 2100 GMT, the euro was trading at 1.2585 dollars in late New York trade, up from 1.2514 late Tuesday. However, in earlier trading, the euro soared above the 1.26-dollar mark for the first time since late February, striking 1.2627 dollars, as currency traders continued to fret over the state of the US economy and skyrocketing oil prices. The dollar also declined against the yen, trading at 108.20 late Wednesday from 108.28 a day earlier. Traders said recent reports on the US economy had been tepid, and that this has sparked fresh doubts about future interest rate hikes ahead of the next Federal Reserve meeting on November 10. "The dollar continues to lose ground against the major currencies as traders assess just how quickly the United States can plug its growing trade deficit," said Paul Jackson, a senior foreign exchange dealer at CMC Group. Amid lingering doubts over the widening trade deficit, weak equity portfolio flows and outflows of foreign direct investment, some market watchers said the dollar may weaker even further. "We now project the euro at 1.27 dollars in one month and at the all-time highs of 1.29 in three months," said Daniel Katzive at UBS. West LB analysts said political considerations were also playing a hand in depressing sentiment on the dollar. "Not only is the (US presidential) election outcome too close to call, but media coverage about the risk that a re-elected Bush government may allow the differences with Iran to escalate do not calm market nerves," they said. The dollar's decline comes a day after JP Morgan said net foreign capital flows into the United States fell to 59 billion in August dollars from a revised 63.1 billion in July. The bank's analysts said such data highlight the lack of capital inflows into the United States at a time when the trade deficit is set to "test new all-time highs." JP Morgan economists believe the current account deficit could reach six percent of GDP by year end due to high oil prices and a persistent US-foreign demand growth gap. In late New York trade, the dollar stood at 1.2217 Swiss francs from 1.2291 Tuesday. The pound stood at 1.8161 dollars after 1.8042.