The euro sank below $1.30 on Wednesday, hitting an 11-month low against the dollar as worries about a lack of a solution to the eurozone sovereign debt crisis kept a dim outlook on the single currency into the year-end. Although Germany and Italy managed to find enough buyers for their debt at auctions on Wednesday, investors focused on the high yields that Italy was forced to pay - a level seen as unsustainable.
At 6.47 percent, the yield on Italy's five-year bond was the highest since the euro was launched in 1999. The euro fell to $1.2944 on Reuters data, its weakest level since January 11, as investors pushed the single currency through options-related barriers at $1.3005, $1.3000, and $1.2990. It last traded at $1.2973, down 0.5 percent. Key downside target lies around $1.2863, the 2011 low. The euro also slipped 0.4 percent against the yen, to 101.28 yen, after falling as low as 101.07, the lowest level since early October.
Comments
Comments are closed.