European Stock Markets
The euro edged higher for a second consecutive day on Wednesday,
recouping more than half of its losses sustained after the German
coalition collapse as investors bought the single currency on
expectations of strong economic growth.
The euro rose 0.25
percent on Wednesday to $1.1769 against the dollar and not far away from
a one-month high of $1.1862 hit last Wednesday.
With risk appetite firmly on the front foot, with
world stocks perched at a record high and market gauges of volatility
heading back towards record lows, even commodity-linked currencies, such
as the New Zealand dollar, which have suffered a recent beating found
some support.
The euro’s gains were also bolstered by the general trend of dollar weakness across the board due to softening U.S. yields.
Spreads
between ten and two-year U.S. Treasury bonds narrowed to 57.4 basis
points in the previous session, its flattest level since late 2007 and
was trading roughly half a basis point higher at around 58 basis points.
The dollar index against a basket of six major currencies was down 0.2 percent at 93.77.
The
index fell back from a one-week high of 94.165 overnight after a rally
triggered earlier this week by a sagging euro stalled as long-term U.S.
Treasury yields continued inching lower.
With
outgoing U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen not offering any firm
clues on where monetary policy in the world’s biggest economy is headed,
the dollar’s near-term outlook remained uncertain.
Yellen
stuck by her prediction that U.S. inflation will soon rebound but
offered on Tuesday an unusually strong caveat: she is “very uncertain”
about this and is open to the possibility that prices could remain low
for years to come.
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