By Deborah Levine
The dollar fell versus the euro Thursday as Europe's single
currency got relief from China's denial of news reports that it was
considering the sale of some of its holdings in euro-denominated
bonds.
The euro (CUR_EURUSD) rose to $1.2356, up from $1.2197 in late
North American trade Wednesday. Its passage of $1.23 tripped some
orders to buy back the euro, according to Action Economics.
The shared currency touched a four-year low near $1.2144 on May
19.
The dollar index (DXY), which tracks the U.S. unit against a
basket of six major currencies, fell to 86.305 from 87.159 on
Wednesday.
Markets shifted as investors became more willing to own asset
classes considered riskier and found less need for the relative
safe-haven status of the U.S. currency, which had notched big gains
this month amid worries about debt and the fiscal cutbacks needed
in Europe.
U.S. equity markets rallied Thursday, with the S&P 500 Index
(SPX) gaining 2.6%. That followed advances in the European and
Asian markets.
"The drubbing stocks and commodities have sustained since April
23 was enough for the time being, or at least until there's greater
clarity as to what the real cost of the euro-zone fiscal and debt
makeover will be," said John Stoltzfus, a senior market strategist
at Ticonderoga Securities.
The euro had slipped below $1.22 late Wednesday after the
Financial Times reported that China was reviewing its holdings of
European bonds. But on Thursday the China State Administration of
Foreign Exchange, or SAFE, called that report "groundless."
In a statement posted on its website, the agency said it
supports measures the European Union and the International Monetary
Fund have undertaken to ensure financial stability within the euro
zone, which it described as "one of the most important investment
markets."
Among the takeaways for investors is that unofficial reports
about Chinese policy efforts should be taken with a grain of
salt.
"China does not leak," said Marc Chandler, a currency strategist
at Brown Brothers Harriman. And this, he added, "does not mean that
they do not monitor developments that impact their investment."
The swing late Wednesday and in the Asian and European session
also indicate it's more a "panic" of short-term traders, not
medium- and long-term investors who "typically react gradually to
developments," Chandler wrote in a note.
Against the Japanese yen, the dollar traded at (CUR_USDYEN)
¥90.85, up from ¥90.01.
The euro traded at ¥112.24, up from ¥109.74
(CUR_EURYEN). The yen and the dollar tend to rise when investors
want a safer, albeit lower-yielding, currency and to fall when risk
appetite is on the rise.
The euro set a low of $1.2155 in Asian trade, failing to test a
four-year low and setting the stage for a rebound, analysts said.
But they also warned that upside was limited.
The dollar crept a little higher after the Labor Department said
the number of Americans filing first-time claims for unemployment
benefits fell 14,000 to 460,000 in the latest week.
That was tempered by a separately report saying the economy grew
at a revised 3% pace in the first quarter, slower than initially
reported.
"The market is likely to need clear evidence that the U.S real
economy has been able to weather the euro-inspired storm," said
Alan Ruskin, head of currency strategy at RBS.
Monthly results
For May -- with the last trading day of the month Friday,
heading into the Memorial Day holiday -- the dollar index is on
pace for the biggest gain since October 2008.
It's up from 81.866 on April 30, extending its advance to a
sixth straight month, as debt-related problems in peripheral
members of the euro zone, protests of cost-cutting efforts and
other actions taken by officials are expected to weigh heavily on
growth in the region.
The euro is on track for its biggest monthly drop since January
2009.
"In order for the currency pair to sustain its gains and to
turnaround permanently, we need to see action by policy makers,"
said Kathy Lien, director of currency research at GFT.
Still, some of the options that would help the euro recover in
the near term -- including possibly lower interest rates or
coordinated injections of liquidity -- are all bearish for the euro
longer term, she said.
In May, the dollar has slipped from ¥94.01, likely
constituting the biggest one-month slide since November.
Among the more popular exchange-traded funds, PowerShares DB
U.S. Dollar Bearish Fund (UDN) lost 6.8% in May, while PowerShares
DB U.S. Dollar Bullish Fund (UUP) returned 6.3%. CurrencyShares
Euro Trust (FXE) has fallen 8.4% this month. CurrencyShares
Japanese Yen Trust (FXY) is up 4.4% so far in May.