The euro rose on Friday as traders were encouraged by improved regional economic growth data and new assurances by Italian politicians that their nation would not leave the single currency.
The euro was on pace for a weekly gain of 0.29 percent against the dollar, reversing the prior week's 1.35 percent drop tied to the European Central Bank's hint it would hold interest rates through the summer of 2019. The euro's advance, together with a rebound in commodity-linked and emerging market currencies, pressured the dollar, putting it in the red this week.
"The German and French data were better. There was more assurance from the Italian government about staying in the single currency," said Minh Trang, senior currency trader at Silicon Valley Bank in Santa Clara, California.
Business activity in Germany and France, the euro zone's top two economies, picked up in June despite trade tensions between Europe and the United States, IHS Markit data showed.
The current Italian government "does not want to exit the euro", Claudio Borghi, a top lawmaker in the far-right League party, said in a newspaper interview. The single currency was also bolstered after Greece clinched debt relief and received a cash infusion from the euro zone.
At 10:22 am (1422 GMT), the euro climbed 0.35 percent at $1.1642, and increased 0.45 percent to 128.17 yen. An index that tracks the dollar versus a basket of currencies including the euro was down 0.07 percent at 94.682, retreating further from an 11-month peak of 95.529 on Thursday.
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