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By Joseph Ciolli, Bloomberg |
December 12, 2012
The dollar fell against the euro after the Federal Reserve added to its monetary-stimulus program by announcing plans to buys more Treasuries, renewing concern the measures will debase the U.S. currency.
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By Joseph Ciolli, Bloomberg |
September 11, 2012
The dollar fell against all of its 16 most-traded counterparts before the Federal Reserve starts a two-day meeting tomorrow amid speculation it will buy bonds to boost the economy.
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By Joseph Ciolli, Bloomberg |
September 10, 2012
The euro fell for the first time in four days versus the dollar as investors expressed skepticism that the region’s debt crisis is being contained.
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By Joseph Ciolli, Bloomberg |
August 29, 2012
The dollar gained against the majority of its most-traded peers as the economy expanded more than previously estimated in the second quarter and as pending home sales in July exceeded forecasts.
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By Joseph Ciolli, Bloomberg |
August 27, 2012
The euro approached a seven-week high against the dollar after German business confidence fell less than some economists forecast, suggesting the region’s largest economy can withstand the sovereign-debt crisis.
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By Joseph Ciolli, Bloomberg |
August 8, 2012
The euro weakened against its most-traded counterparts as a drop in German industrial production, lower U.K. growth forecasts and ratings cuts for Spain and Italy raised concern Europe’s sovereign-debt crisis is worsening.
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By Joseph Ciolli, Bloomberg |
August 7, 2012
The euro rose to a more than three- week high versus the yen amid speculation that the European Central Bank is taking appropriate measures to quell the region’s debt crisis.
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By Joseph Ciolli, Bloomberg |
August 6, 2012
The dollar fell against most of its major counterparts as risk appetite increased amid speculation central banks may take further steps to boost economic growth.
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By Joseph Ciolli, Bloomberg |
August 4, 2012
The dollar fell as risk appetite increased amid continued speculation that central banks may take further steps to boost economic growth.
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By Joseph Ciolli, Bloomberg |
July 24, 2012
The euro slid to the lowest level in more than 11 years versus the yen as speculation Europe’s sovereign-debt crisis is worsening spurred demand for safety.