Euro weakest in over three weeks against dollar
NEW YORK: The US dollar was modestly stronger against the euro on Tuesday, after earlier gaining to a 3-1/2-week high, as investors evaluated international growth prospects with the US and European central banks unlikely to raise interest rates soon.
Survey data on Monday showed factories in the euro zone had their worst month in almost six years in March, while economic data in the United States offered more hope.
Data on Tuesday, however, showed that new orders for key US-made capital goods unexpectedly fell in February and shipments were unchanged, while data for January was revised slightly higher.
"The theme is really is good US data good or bad for the dollar?" said Mark McCormick, North American head of FX strategy at TD Securities in Toronto, adding that it may in fact be negative with the Federal Reserve on hold regarding rates.
That is because a solid US economy should help the view that the global economy will stabilize, and encourage investors searching out yield to move into emerging markets for higher returns, he said.
Outflows from European equity exchange-traded funds have also diminished, which suggests an improving outlook for the region, McCormick said. Like the Fed, the ECB is not expected to raise rates in the near term.
The single currency was last $1.1201 against the dollar , after earlier dipping to $1.1188, the lowest since March 8. The euro is nearing the $1.1174 level, which if broken would send the currency to its weakest levels since June 2017.
Some technical indicators suggest the euro may be nearing the end of its downturn, and that it should find support soon if it does not drop below the $1.1185-$1.1175 region.
The euro is trying to find a bottom, "but (it) needs to do more work," Karen Jones, a technical analyst at Commerzbank wrote on Tuesday in a report.
Australia's dollar shed more than 0.53% after the Australian government downgraded its growth forecasts but said it expected the economy to extend its enviable recession-free run of growth into a third decade.
Sterling dropped 0.40% after lawmakers rejected four Brexit proposals, heightening Britain's uncertainty just 10 days before it is due to leave the European Union.
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