Thursday, October 30, 2008

US Dollar Comeback

US dollar makes comeback, 'bucking' world downturn
Amid wreckage of the US financial system, the battered buck makes surprise comeback


October 29, 2008: 06:24 PM EST


The stock market is in shambles, credit markets are squeezed and corporate earnings are cratering. But one piece of the mangled U.S. economy is making an improbable comeback: The once-almighty dollar.


As the financial meltdown clobbers world economies from South America to Asia, investors desperate for safe assets are plowing money into the battered buck _ helping it snap a six-year slide and reclaim its long-held status as a stable asset during rough times.


"The dollar has become the safe-haven play," said Kathy Lien, director of currency research at Global Forex Trading in New York. "It's a pretty monumental move we're seeing."


Trouble is, a resurrected greenback may not be a good thing.


While a stronger dollar makes vacations overseas and commodities like oil cheaper for Americans, it also makes U.S. exports more expensive. That could deepen the U.S. downturn by hurting companies from Boeing Co. to Caterpillar Inc. and Coca-Cola Co. that get an increasingly big chunk of their earnings from overseas.


Still, the dollar's recovery is stunning for a currency that until recently was considered the dog among its main rivals. After reigning supreme as the world's dominant reserve currency for decades, the dollar began a steep decline in 2002, buckling under the weight of costly wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and an economy with an $800 billion annual trade deficit.


Falling U.S. interest rates this year sped up the dollar's decline until it took $1.60 to buy one euro at one point this summer. Shortly after the euro was introduced in January 2002, it took only 88 cents to buy one euro.


Now, suddenly, the buck looks safe by comparison. to read the full story, please follow this link:


Courtesy: UK Currency News | money.cnn.com | NEW YORK (Associated Press)

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Yen Rises against Dollar and Euro

Oct. 29 (Bloomberg) -- The yen rose against the dollar and the euro after U.S. stock futures fell, prompting investors to pare holdings of higher-yielding assets funded with Japan's currency. To read more please follow this link:


Dollar – Euros – Pounds – Yen


Courtesy: Convert Currency | Bloomberg.com

Monday, October 27, 2008

Dollar and The Silver Lining

Dollar the silver lining of cloudy finances
Kathleen Pender
Monday, October 27, 2008


One of the few things going up since the financial meltdown began? The U.S. dollar.


Around midyear, as the credit crisis intensified, the dollar ended its seven-year losing streak and started rising against most currencies except the Japanese yen, which is soaring for reasons I'll get to below.
Net Worth


More Net Worth »


Since June 30, the greenback is up 26 percent against the euro, 28 percent against the British pound and 59 percent against the Australian dollar... To read more, please follow this link:


Currency Broker

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Currency News October 27

India Morning Call - Global Markets
Mon Oct 27, 2008 8:06am IST


FOREIGN EXCHANGE


NEW YORK - The U.S. dollar surged to two-year peaks versus a basket of currencies on Friday as dismal economic data from Europe reinforced fears of a global recession, adding to a selling frenzy on world stock markets.


The yen soared to multiyear highs versus the dollar and euro on the ensuing risk aversion, while at the low the British pound suffered its biggest one-day percentage drop against the U.S. currency since September 1992, according to Reuters data.


For Full Story, Please follow this link: Foreign Exchange


Economic rout seems to take on a life of its own
By Jeremy Gaunt
Published: October 26, 2008


LONDON: The big question facing investors across the world this week is, "How long will this go on."


The U.S. Federal Reserve Board is widely expected to cut interest rates sharply, corporate earnings reports will flow in and many investors will be looking at the preparations for a global financial summit meeting next month, and even the U.S. presidential election.


But the sell-off/panic/rout - call it what you will - on stock markets and foreign exchange last week and in the months preceding has become so severe that it is almost gaining a life of its own outside of events.


For Full story, please follow this link: Currency Online


Yen gains, Nikkei hits 26-yr low as markets suffer
Monday October 27 2008


* Yen rises near 13-yr high vs dlr, all-time high vs Aussie
* Yen gains trimmed as stocks attempt recovery, EM FX rise
* RBA confirms Aussie-buying Friday, says will intervene
* Japan set to offer market help, IMF aids Ukraine, Hungary
By Eric Burroughs


TOKYO, Oct 27 (Reuters) - The yen climbed back near a 13-year peak against the dollar on Monday and an all-time high versus the Australian dollar as more investors dumped stocks and higher-yielding currencies on fears of a deep global recession.


But the yen relinquished some early gains as Japan's Nikkei share average tried to mount a recovery from an early drop to a 26-year low and emerging market currencies such as the South Korean won pushed higher.


For full story, please follow this link: Euros | Pounds | Dollars

Saturday, October 25, 2008

Currency Crisis

GLOBAL ECONOMY
‘A Full-Blown Crisis’


Emerging markets were supposed to save the world with their fiscal responsibility. So much for that.
By Stefan Theil | NEWSWEEK


Last week seemed to be the nail in the coffin of "decoupling," a theory that said increasingly savvy and solvent emerging markets would no longer march in economic tandem with more-developed nations. As the global financial crisis deepened, South Korea announced a $130 billion bailout for credit-starved banks and companies, Ukraine canceled elections amid a growing national crisis over frozen credit markets and a plummeting currency, and Pakistan asked the International Monetary Fund to arrange emergency financing amid the country's worsening economic meltdown. All this came after a torrent of ratings and outlook downgrades by agencies like Fitch and Moody's on former shooting stars such as India, Vietnam, Hungary and Argentina.


What happened? Only a few months ago...


To read the full story please follow this link:


Courtesy: Online Currency Exchange | newsweek.com/id/165771/page/2


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Friday, October 24, 2008

Dollar and Yen Soar

By MARK LANDLER and VIKAS BAJAJ
Published: October 24, 2008


WASHINGTON — Fear that the financial crisis is infecting once-healthy economies created another white-knuckle day for investors Friday, causing stocks to tumble from Tokyo to New York.


Dealers at a currency exchange in Tokyo. The yen drove down currencies in emerging markets.


Uncertainty also roiled currency markets as investors continued to turn to the security of the United States dollar and the Japanese yen and drove down currencies of developing countries like Brazil, Ukraine and South Korea and even of developed countries like Britain.


In the United States, where the crisis began, investors were less alarmed than elsewhere. A rout in Asian and European stock markets sent the Dow Jones industrial average swooning by more than 500 points in early trading in New York, but trading recovered enough ground through the day to leave the Dow down 312.30 points, or 3.6 percent.


Just a year ago, a drop of that size would have been considered a black day in the markets, but in these days of routine triple-digit declines, it offered a modicum of relief to traumatized investors.


Still, there were chilling new developments that attested to the wide scope of the crisis, despite efforts by heads of state, central bankers and corporate leaders to stop the bleeding. Cash flowed into the dollar and the Japanese yen, the two most sought-after safe havens in a storm-tossed world, as it fled from emerging markets.


To read the full story… Please follow this link:


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Article courtesy: nytimes.com/2008/10/25/business/25currency.html?pagewanted=2&_r=1&ref=worldbusiness


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Australian Dollar Plummets

Dollar plummets to 6-year low against yen
October 24, 2008 - 7:21PM


The Australian dollar fell this week to the lowest levels against the yen in at least six years as investors sold higher-yielding assets.


The currency headed for its third weekly drop this month as Asian stocks slid on signs the world economy is on the brink of a recession. Investors bought back yen they borrowed in so-called carry trades used to purchase assets offering higher returns in Australia.


The dollar also fell versus the US currency as the price of commodities the countries export plunged on concern demand will falter.


``What you have is the global economy going down, commodity prices coming off and the old theme of global de-leveraging,'' said Thomas Harr, a senior currency strategist at Standard Chartered in Singapore. ``All of these issues are negative for the Aussie and the (New Zealand dollar) and positive for the yen.''


Australia's dollar dropped 13.7% this week to 60.42 yen in Sydney from 70 yen on October 17 in New York. It earlier reached 60.17 today, the lowest since October 2001.


The Australian dollar fell 7.3% to 63.84 US cents from 68.88 cents in New York on October 17.


Risk aversion


``The Aussie is always seen as a proxy for risk aversion and emerging currencies in these times,'' said Gregg Gibbs, a currency strategist at ABN Amro Australia in Sydney. ``It's a liquid currency that offers scope to get in and get trades done when people are fearing the worst.''


Australia's dollar has dropped 31% against the yen and 23% versus the US dollar in the past month, the second-biggest losses of the 16 major currencies, as increasing signs of a global recession hammered stock and commodity prices.


The Australian dollar still ``targets'' the 2000 low of 55.52 yen based on charts that predict price movements, said Kevin Edgeley, a technical analyst at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in London. Daily momentum indicators such as the stochastic oscillator chart have ``turned lower again,'' Edgeley wrote in a research note yesterday.


Australia's S&P/ASX 200 Index of shares has declined 39% this year, joining a rout in global equities. Asian stocks tumbled after South Korea's economic growth weakened, deepening concern a global slowdown is hurting profits.


Commodities


The UBS Bloomberg Constant Maturity Commodity index of 26 raw materials dropped for a third day yesterday and is down 24% for the year. Raw materials account for 60% of Australia's exports.
The VIX volatility index, a gauge reflecting expectations for stock-market price changes and risk appetite, was at 67.80 compared with a record high closing price of 70.33 on October 17.


Benchmark interest rates are 6% in Australia, compared with 0.5% in Japan and 1.5% in the US, making its assets a favorite for carry trades.


In a carry trade, investors get funds in a country with low borrowing costs and invest in one with higher interest rates, earning the spread between the two. The risk is that currency moves erase those profits.


RBA


The Reserve Bank of Australia will lower rates by 1.60 percentage points over the next year, according to a separate Credit Suisse index.


``We are now forecasting below-trend growth through to 2010,'' Tony Morriss, a senior currency strategist at ANZ Banking Group Ltd. in Sydney, wrote in a research note October 21. ``We now expect the Reserve Bank to cut rates further over coming months, toward a cash rate of 4.5%.''


Australian government bonds rose for a fifth day. The yield on the benchmark 10-year note fell 17 basis points to 4.91%, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The price of the 5.25% security due March 2019 climbed 1.372, or $13.72 per $1,000 face amount, to 102.711. A basis point equals 0.01 percentage point.


Courtesy: Dollar-Euros-Pound | business.smh.com.au | Bloomberg News


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Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Today's Currency News in Brief

Currency Gambles Backfire


Huge Losses From Dollar's Gains Surface at Companies in Developing World


Currency is a gamble... But here is the classic backfire. A currency news snippet...


One day, Controladora Comercial Mexicana SAB de CV was thriving as Mexico's No. 3 retailer and a competitor of discount giant Wal-Mart Stores Inc. The next day, Oct. 9, the family-owned chain, known to Mexican shoppers as La Comer, had filed for bankruptcy protection, crippled by risky foreign-currency bets.


Such abrupt reversals have gotten more common these days. As global stock markets have plunged in recent months, so has the value of almost everything else, from Mexico's peso to the price of oil. That's left some companies that made big wagers on the direction prices were headed reeling from unexpected ...


Courtesy: Currency Charts + Wall Street Journal


 


Korea Could Give Currency Help, Jun Says
By Bomi Lim and Bernard Lo


Oct. 22 (Bloomberg) -- South Korea is ready to take more measures to restore confidence in its financial system if needed, including a package to shore up the economy, the nation's top financial regulator said.


"The follow-up measures any country can take now are fiscal stimulus packages, economic boosting measures,'' Jun Kwang Woo, chairman of the Financial Services Commission, said yesterday in an interview in Seoul. ``Korea is in the most comfortable position to do just that.''


The benchmark Kospi stock index and the won fell for a second day on concern government measures -- including 8 trillion won ($6 billion) to support the construction industry -- won't be enough to avert an economic slowdown. Growth probably slowed to a three-year low 3.6 percent in the third quarter, according to the median estimate of 12 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News.


"We certainly have the right kind of support mechanism to be used whenever it is needed,'' Jun, 59, said in the interview. ``Given the enormity of this current round of credit crunch around the world, we cannot live without having an adequate contingency plan.''


South Korea, saddled with a record current account deficit, pledged $130 billion, equivalent to 14 percent of gross domestic product, to support banks as the global credit crunch saps access to foreign funds. The government Oct. 19 agreed to give lenders access to $30 billion in U.S. dollars and guarantee $100 billion of foreign-currency debt.


Package Approved


The financial-aid package won the support of the three main credit ratings companies. Moody's Investors Service and Fitch Ratings yesterday affirmed South Korea's sovereign credit ratings. Standard & Poor's, which last week sparked the won's biggest one- day drop since 1997 by placing the five biggest banks on review for a rating cut, said the bank plan is more ``swift and broad'' than expected.


South Korea's central bank may buy debt from lenders, Finance Minister Kang Man Soo said today after a Korea Economic Daily report that the Bank of Korea may purchase 25 trillion won of local bank debt maturing by the end of the year.


"We expect there will soon be an action plan on details of buying bank bonds, Kang told lawmakers in Seoul.


South Korea joined the U.S., Europe and Australia in providing lenders with state backing after S&P warned that banks in Asia's fourth-largest economy may struggle to secure overseas funds.


Debt Ratio


President Lee Myung Bak said yesterday the global financial turmoil is worse than the 1997-98 Asian crisis that forced South Korea to accept an International Monetary Fund bailout.


"We are a lot better equipped than 10 years ago,'' said Jun, who earned a doctor's degree in finance at Indiana University in 1981. Korean companies have become more competitive globally over the decade, and banks' capital and asset quality remain sound, he said.


South Korea's debt ratio is near the lowest among major economies, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. The country's financial liabilities stood at 28 percent of GDP in 2006, compared with Japan's 180 percent and 62 percent in the U.S., according to the OECD Web site.


South Korean banks' capital adequacy ratio stood at 11.36 percent at the end of June, compared with the U.S. average of 12.36 percent, according to the Financial Supervisory Service. Korean lenders' nonperforming loan ratio dropped to 0.7 percent at the end of June from three months earlier.


Loan Delinquency


The delinquency ratio on corporate loans rose in the third quarter as more small firms were late on payments, the watchdog agency said today. The delinquency ratio rose to 1.35 percent at the end of September from 1.22 percent at the end of June.


The chief executive officers of 18 banks in Korea met today and agreed to cut executive salaries and operating costs ``to share the pain of our people.''


The lenders will consider rescheduling debts and allowing borrowers to repay in installments, according to a copy of the resolution released by the Korea Federation of Banks.


The Kospi index fell 3.2 percent at 1:24 p.m. in Seoul, led by Posco, after Asia's biggest maker of stainless steel, said it will slash production as demand slows. The index has slumped 39 percent this year.


The won, Asia's worst performing currency this year, fell 3.1 percent to 1,361.50 to the dollar.


"We may need a stronger package to meaningfully reduce embedded risks in Korea's financial system,'' Morgan Stanley analysts including Chan Hwang wrote in an Oct. 20 report. They cited a potential slowdown in exports, a weakening outlook for consumption and financial deterioration at smaller companies as some of the risks Korea faces. Exports account to more than 50 percent of the Korean economy.


"It's always good to have preemptive measures,'' Jun said. "At the same time, we have to be careful about overshooting.''


Last Updated: October 22, 2008 00:27 EDT


Courtesy: Charts for Currency Conversions + Bloomberg

Friday, October 17, 2008

Converting Currency to Euros

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Friday, October 10, 2008

Currency Chart

Here is a quick way of seeing the current situation on the currency exchange. The chart is updated every 20 minutes…


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Currency Chart

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Online Currency Exchange

Few people instantly have trust with a website, especially when it involves their money. We aim to dispell your fears and give you confidence to use an Online Currency Exchange. If, for example you are changing British Pounds in Euros we could save you as much as £15,000 over our main competitors - the high street banks.

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