The
euro traded 0.2 percent from the lowest in six weeks against the U.S. dollar
before Italy’s parliamentary election starts this weekend.
The
17-nation currency headed for a third weekly loss ahead of the Feb. 24-25
voting, with opinion polls from earlier this month showing former premier
Silvio Berlusconi closing a gap with front-runner Pier Luigi Bersani. The yen
fell against most of its major peers amid speculation over who will take the
reins at the Bank of Japan.
“The
Italian election is weighing on the euro,” said Noriaki Murao, managing
director of the marketing group at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. in New
York. “If it becomes a close race, it may result in a hung parliament, making
it more difficult to push forward with reforms.”
The
euro traded little changed at $1.3193 as of 9:16 a.m. in Tokyo from yesterday,
when it touched $1.3161, the lowest since Jan. 10. The shared currency gained
0.2 percent to 123.08 yen, after dropping to 122.26 yesterday, the weakest
since Jan. 29. For the week, the euro was set for a 1.3 percent decline versus
the greenback and 1.5 percent drop against the yen. The Japanese currency slid
0.2 percent to 93.26 per dollar, still headed for a 0.3 percent gain this week.
(source: Bloomberg)
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