The
dollar declined versus most of its major peers after Federal Reserve Chairman
Ben S. Bernanke said inflation and unemployment rates show the U.S. economy
still requires very accommodative monetary stimulus.
The
Dollar Index tumbled before a report today that may show continuing jobless
claims rose. That underscores views expressed in minutes of the Fed’s last
meeting released yesterday, which showed many policy makers want to see more
signs that employment is picking up before they’ll begin slowing bond
purchases. The yen weakened against the euro ahead of a policy decision today
by the Bank of Japan.
The
dollar slid 0.9 percent to $1.3088 per euro at 9:56 a.m. Tokyo time after
earlier touching $1.3207, the weakest since June 21. It reached 98.27 yen, the
least since June 27, before trading at 99.58 yen, 0.1 percent lower than
yesterday. Japan’s currency lost 0.8 percent to 130.32 per euro.
The
Dollar Index, which IntercontinentalExchange Inc. uses to track the greenback
versus currencies of six major U.S. trade partners including the euro and yen,
fell 1.3 percent to 82.923 after earlier dropping to 82.686, the lowest since
June 26.
(Source: Bloomberg)
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