By Carol
Matlack on January 16, 2013
http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2013-01-16/a-strong-euro-starts-to-worry-europe#r=nav-fst
A new
obstacle lies in the path of euro zone economies struggling to regain traction.
It’s the strength of the euro currency, which is trading this week near a
10-month high of $1.34 against the dollar and threatening the competitiveness
of European exporters. “Dangerously high” was how Luxembourg Prime Minister
Jean-Claude Juncker described the exchange rate in a Jan. 15 speech.
The euro’s
rise is particularly worrisome for Germany , where exporters are
already saddled with increasing labor costs. Berlin on Jan. 16 cut the country’s 2013
growth forecast to 0.4 percent, down from 0.7 percent last year. Germany “has been the pillar of confidence for
Europe,” Daniel Weston, chief investment officer at Aimed Capital Management in
Munich , told
Bloomberg News. “If exports weaken in Germany , European economic growth
is a grave concern.”
For now, the
European Central Bank is signalling that it won’t act to weaken the currency.
ECB council member Ewald Nowotny told reporters in Vienna today that the exchange rate was “not
a major concern.” Central Bank President Mario Draghi said last week that he had
no goal for the exchange rate—a view echoed by ECB Executive Board member Peter
Praet, who said in a Belgian newspaper interview published today that the rate
was “one variable to be factored in, but isn’t a goal in itself.”
Still,
economists at Citigroup (C) in London
are forecasting that further strengthening of the euro could propel the ECB to
cut the current 0.75 percent benchmark interest rate as early as the second
quarter of this year. “European politicians are increasingly worried about the
effect of a strong euro on an already weak euro area economy,” they wrote in a
research note.
Euro zone
leaders aren’t the only ones fretting about exchange rates. Japan ’s central
bank has moved to weaken the yen in recent weeks, spurring alarms by trading partners
whose exports risk losing competitiveness against the Japanese. Bank of Korea Governor Kim Choong Soo warned on Jan. 14
that the yen’s softening could provoke an “active response” by Korea .
In Europe, Switzerland has
blocked the appreciation of its currency against the euro. And the deputy
governor of Norway ’s central
bank, Jan F. Qvigstad, said on Jan. 15 that the strengthening of the Norwegian
kroner as a perceived safe haven against the euro could lead Norway to cut
interest rates as early as March.
Such
comments prompted Alexei Ulyukayev, first deputy chairman of Russia ’s
central bank, to warn that the world is on the brink of a “currency war,”
violating earlier pledges by major industrialized countries to refrain from
“competitive devaluation.”
The
skirmishing, clearly, has already begun. The Jan. 15 comments by Luxembourg ’s Juncker and Norway ’s Qvigstad marked “the first day European
policy makers fired a shot in the 2013 currency war,” says Chris Turner, head
of foreign-exchange strategy at ING (INGA) in London .
—With
reporting by Simon Kennedy, Scott Rose, and Namitha Jagadeesh of Bloomberg News
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