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The dollar hit a six-month high against a basket of major currencies on Tuesday, benefiting from weakness in commodities, as investors looked beyond US growth worries to a slowing global economy. The euro slid to a six-month low against the dollar, while the pound slipped below $1.90 to a 21-month trough, as fears grew that economic malaise in the United States is leading to a broader global slowdown.
The euro has seen a sustained fall since European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said last week the euro zone economy was slowing more than policymakers had expected. It has broken a series of key chart levels, convincing some analysts that the dollar may be ending its seven-year slide.
Inflation hedges oil and gold fell, with crude below $114 a barrel, while bullion hit its lowest in eight months. "As long as we see commodity prices moving lower ... we still see downside in euro/dollar medium to long term," said Michael Klawitter, currency strategist at Dresdner Kleinwort in Frankfurt.
However he said there was potential for short-term recovery in the euro given technical positioning, and that it should be supported for now at around these levels.
"The move in favour of the dollar over the last week has pretty much come to an end, and with the market being clearly overbought dollar and oversold euro/dollar and so on, I think the risk of technical bounces (for the euro) is significant." By 1053 GMT, the euro was down 0.1 percent on the day at $1.4890 after touching a six-month low of $1.4812, according to Reuters data.
The dollar index, which measures the US unit against a basket of six currencies, rose 0.2 percent to 76.362, having hit a six-month high of 76.616. The index rose for the eighth straight trading day and over that time has surged more than four percent - on track for its biggest such winning streak in 13 years.
The dollar was steady at 110.13 yen, within striking distance of a seven-month peak of 110.40 hit on EBS the previous day, while the euro was steady at 164.05.
The pound fell to a 21-month trough against the dollar of $1.8970 before recovering slightly to trade at $1.9012. The US economy is still ailing with the financial sector reeling from a year-old credit crisis, but analysts say the outlook elsewhere in the world has buoyed its position.
The euro area and Britain have buckled under the twin strains of higher inflation and fading growth. However there are still risks for the dollar from US data if it comes in much weaker than expected, with analysts looking to US trade balance data at 1230 GMT for more signs of strain.
"The release could highlight concerns that if the one area of growth for the US economy begins to weaken and the slack isn't taken up domestically, the economy may sink further, which could weigh on the dollar today," said Forex Capital Markets in a note to clients.
Tumbling commodity prices hit the high-yielding Australian dollar, which sank to a seven-month low against the US dollar, also weighed by expectations of lower interest rates. The Aussie dropped 0.7 percent to $0.8734 after falling as low as $0.8705, its weakest since January.

Copyright Reuters, 2008

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