Money - International
Euro at one-month lows before ECB meeting; yuan fragile
An employee shows fifty-euro notes in a bank in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, in this March 19, 2012 file photo.u00c2u00a0u00e2u20acu201d Reuters pic

LONDON, Jan 22 — The euro remained at a one-month low today amid expectations European Central Bank policymakers would strike a cautious tone when they met later tomorrow.

A survey by Germany’s ZEW research institute showed on Monday investors’ mood improved more than expected in January and the signing of a China-US trade pact raised hopes Europe’s economy would recover. A Citigroup index of euro zone economic activity rose to its highest since February 2018.

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But analysts say the improvement in the business surveys is not yet evident in actual economic activity, which remained weak at the end of last year.

"The ECB is likely to acknowledge that downside risks have eased, but there is no need to signal that it plans to deviate from their looser-for-longer policy message at the current juncture,” MUFG strategists said in a note.

Against the dollar, the euro was weaker at US$1.1077, its lowest since December 25. It has weakened more than 1 per cent so far this month.

Elsewhere, the yuan dipped and the Australian dollar hit a six-week low on fears the outbreak of a new coronavirus in China would create more problems for the Chinese economy.

The Australian dollar, often used as a proxy bet on the Chinese economy, fell as low as US$0.6827, a trough last seen in mid-December, and last stood at US$0.6837, down 0.13 per cent.

The concerns surrounding the little-known virus propped up the safe-haven yen, which traded at 109.98 yen, up from Tuesday’s low of 110.23.

The yuan had fallen about 0.55 per cent on Tuesday, its biggest decline in almost five months, in the onshore trade. It last stood at 6.9063 per dollar, almost flat on the day. — Reuters

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