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imageNEW YORK: The euro was slightly higher against the dollar while the yen picked up a little ground in mostly quiet forex market action Monday.

A fall for the third straight month in German industrial production in May hit share markets but had no real impact on the common currency.

According to the economy ministry, industrial output decreased by 1.8 percent in May, after slipping by 0.3 percent in April. Manufacturing output was down 1.6 percent and construction output off 4.9 percent. Analysts said a key cause was slowing economies in Asia and the Ukraine crisis.

The numbers show that "risk factors like slowing emerging market economies, including China, and geopolitical conflicts do have an impact on the German economy," said ING DiBa economist Carsten Brzeski.

"The German industry is currently treading water. Already last week, German new orders had dropped in May, with the sharpest drop coming from orders from outside the Eurozone," Brzeski said.

Analysts continued to put a cap on the euro's potential upside, pointing to the European Central Bank's continued dovish stance, even after it kept its monetary policy unchanged last week.

"The ECB's 'lower for longer' stance is prohibitive for the Euro because the British pound and the US dollar are being bombarded with strong economic data and rising sovereign yields as a result," said Christopher Vecchio at DailyFX.

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