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Euro falls below $1.3300 vs dollar, 1st in 10 mths

The euro fell below $1.3300 for the first time in 10 months on Thursday as investors remained skeptical about whether the EU will agree on a quick rescue plan for heavily indebted Greece at a summit this week, with triggered stop-loss orders exacerbating its fall.

The euro's weakness was compounded by broad strength in the dollar.

The euro fell as far as $1.3283 on trading platform EBS, the lowest since May 2009, before trading at $1.3294, down 0.1 percent on the day. >>

Euro falls to session low against the yen

The euro fell 1 percent to a session low against the yen on Monday with the single currency still pressured by concern about whether Greece will be able to secure aid this week to help service its ballooning debts.

The euro was last down 1 percent against the yen at 121.23 yen after going as low as 121.16 yen. The euro was last down 0.4 percent at $1.3478 after also hitting a session low against the dollar at $1.3464 >>

 

 

CANADA FX DEBT-C$ pushes higher as Fed-induced boost lingers

The Canadian dollar extended gains on Wednesday, supported by firm commodity prices and lingering euphoria from a renewed pledge by the U.S. Federal Reserve to keep interest rates low for an extended period.

 

 The Canadian dollar built on the Fed-induced momentum to touch C$1.0108 to the U.S. dollar, or 98.93 U.S. cents, on Wednesday morning as world stocks climbed in response to the U.S. central bank's policy stance and assessment of the economic outlook.  >>

Bank of England holds rates, no change on QE

The Bank of England on Thursday kept interest rates at a record low of 0.5 percent and made no increase to its unprecedented scheme of pumping money into an economy struggling to get back on its feet.

The decision was widely expected and analysts expect no change in monetary policy until much later this year as the central bank waits for a clearer recovery from the worst economic downturn since World War 2.

If anything, BoE policymakers have left the door open to more monetary easing in the form of expanding their 200 billion pound scheme to buy assets with newly created money -- quantitative easing in the jargon -- if the economy worsens.

The BoE cut rates to their current record low and started QE last March when the economy was still reeling from a global credit crunch. >>

 

 

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