Never miss a great news story!
Get instant notifications from Economic Times
AllowNot now


You can switch off notifications anytime using browser settings.

Portfolio

Loading...
Select Portfolio and Asset Combination for Display on Market Band
Select Portfolio
Select Asset Class
Show More
Download ET MARKETS APP

Get ET Markets in your own language

DOWNLOAD THE APP NOW

+91

CHOOSE LANGUAGE

ENG

  • ENG - English
  • HIN - हिन्दी
  • GUJ - ગુજરાતી
  • MAR - मराठी
  • BEN - বাংলা
  • KAN - ಕನ್ನಡ
  • ORI - ଓଡିଆ
  • TEL - తెలుగు
  • TAM - தமிழ்
Drag according to your convenience
ET NOW RADIO
ET NOW
TIMES NOW

Euro set for biggest weekly rise in a month; ECB eyed

Reuters|
Updated: Oct 13, 2017, 01.08 PM IST
0Comments
It has gained 1 per cent so far this week, putting it on course for its biggest rise since the week of Sept. 9.
It has gained 1 per cent so far this week, putting it on course for its biggest rise since the week of Sept. 9.
LONDON: The euro edged higher on Friday, on track for its biggest weekly rise in a month as investors switched focus from the euro zone's political concerns to its brightening economic outlook.

Appetite for the single currency was also supported by strong Chinese trade data for September and a weakening dollar following cautious comments from U.S. policymakers.

"If the European economic recovery continues and the ECB pushes ahead with policy normalisation, we will see the euro trade above 1.30 within 18 months or so," said Kit Juckes, an FX strategist at Societe Generale in London.

The single currency was trading 0.1 per cent higher at $1.1839 on Friday. It has gained 1 per cent so far this week, putting it on course for its biggest rise since the week of Sept. 9.

European Central Bank policymakers broadly agreed to extend asset purchases at a lower volume at their October policy meeting with views converging on a nine-month extension, five people with direct knowledge of the discussion told Reuters.

The dollar was set for its biggest weekly drop in more than a month as U.S. Treasury yields stayed near recent lows before U.S. inflation data.

The dollar index, which tracks the currency against a basket of six major peers, was 0.1 per cent lower at 92.970, and poised to shed 0.9 per cent for the week.

The index had risen to a 10-week peak of 94.267 last Friday after robust U.S. wages data hardened expectations for a December Federal Reserve rate hike, but it has slipped through the week along with a steady decline in Treasury yields.

"When the U.S. 10-year yield struggles below 2.4 per cent, it comes as no surprise to see the dollar having a difficult time rising against the yen," said Makoto Noji, senior strategist at SMBC Nikko Securities.

"The difference between domestic and foreign bond yields drive short-term trends and yen selling momentum is suppressed when foreign yields stay relatively low."
0Comments

Also Read

Euro rally keeps dollar in the doldrums

France launches 57-billion euro investment fund

Euro, NZ dollar both sideswiped by political uncertainty

Euro tiptoes higher again as ECB eyed

European shares slip as euro surges; Altice outperforms

Comments
Add Your Comments

Loading
Please wait...