Currency
Hits Lowest Point Against Dollar Since Late 2005
By JAMES RAMAGE
Updated Jan. 13, 2015 4:42 p.m. ET
The Wall
Street Journal
The euro
slipped to a new nine-year low against the dollar on Tuesday as investors bet
the European Central Bank would announce broad measures to lift the economy and
consumer prices at its meeting next week.
The euro
dropped to $1.1753, the lowest since Dec. 8, 2005, before recovering to trade
at $1.1773, down 0.5% for the day. The euro has fallen 0.9% against the yen to
a two-month low of ¥138.73.
Investors
have been abandoning the euro in droves since last May as the ECB has eased
monetary policy in its effort to battle stagnant growth and falling inflation
in the eurozone. The euro has dropped 16% against the greenback from a 2014
high of $1.3995 it reached on May 8.
There is
growing anticipation across financial markets that the ECB will announce a
large asset-purchase program, also called quantitative easing, at its meeting
on Jan. 22. Such a move would boost eurozone equities but would weaken the
single currency.
Falling oil
prices have weighed on already low inflation expectations for economies across
the globe but have added pressure on the ECB in particular to take action. The
global oil-price benchmark ended Monday below $50 a barrel for the first time
in nearly six years and has fallen more than 17% since the start of 2015.
As the
central bank meeting draws closer, the euro remains vulnerable to sliding to
new lows, said Joe Manimbo, senior market analyst at Western
Union .
“It sounds
like full-blown QE in the eurozone is on the way as soon as next week,” Mr.
Manimbo said. “That might provide some much-needed relief to the economy, but
it’s liable to come at the price of a weaker euro.”
As energy
importers, eurozone member economies mostly stand to benefit from the plunge in
crude, but they are also struggling to emerge from an inflation tailspin.
Annual inflation in the eurozone was most recently measured at negative-0.2%,
far below the ECB’s target of almost 2%.
In other
trade, the dollar lost 0.5% against the yen to ¥117.82, a four-week low, as
investors turned cautious heading into the afternoon. Rising concerns about low
prices and stagnant growth around the globe, and the possibility both could
delay a rise in U.S.
interest rates, led investors toward assets they perceive as safe, including
U.S. Treasurys, gold and the Japanese currency.
Amid the
turbulent markets, investors are waiting to see if U.S. retail sales and
consumer-price index numbers, due this week, will show the federal government
can steer the economy toward steadier growth, despite its own struggles with
low wages and inflation.
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