Daily Report: EUR/USD, GBP/USD, USD/JPY And USD/CAD

 | Mar 08, 2013 04:11AM ET

The U.S. Dollar declined against the Euro but reached a two and a half year high against the Yen as the President of the European Central Bank issued a statement that the region’s economy would stabilize in 2013. On the data front, the U.S. Labor Department revealed that the number of individuals who applied for Unemployment Benefits declined by 7,000 to a seasonally adjusted 340,000 last week. Other releases showed that the country’s Trade Deficit expanded more than predicted. According to official Commerce Department figures, the gap widened by 16.5 percent from $38.1 billion in December to $44.4 billion in January. Analysts explained that this was brought on by a drop in exports, as fuel oil and gold reversed earnings in the previous month. The Canadian Dollar rebounded from an almost eight month-low versus its American counterpart after the country posted the smallest Merchandise Trade Deficit in close to 12 months in January as exports of crude oil and bitumen rose. The Loonie surged versus the majority of its peers after the U.S. announced that the number of individuals who filed for Unemployment Claims dipped to a six-week low, suggesting that the sector is still improving. The Canadian currency dropped the day before when the central bank left the cost of borrowing money unchanged.

The Euro climbed the most in eight months against the U.S. Dollar and rallied versus the Yen after the European Central Bank left the benchmark interest rates at 0.75 percent and indicated that the majority of the bank’s officials supported the decision. The ECB revised its forecasts for economic growth in 2013 and suggested that Gross Domestic Product may shrink between 0.1 and 0.9 percent rather than the previously estimated 0.3 percent. The shared currency was also supported by news that Spanish borrowing costs fell during a bond auction. The British Pound reversed early session losses against the U.S. monetary unit after the Bank of England announced it would leave the interest rate at 0.5 percent and refrained from making any changes to the current asset-purchasing program.

The Yen slipped for the second day in a row against the greenback as the Bank of Japan rejected the idea of an immediate implementation of open-ended asset purchasing. Japan’s currency was also weighed down by U.S. Labor Department reports which revealed that the number of American who filed for Unemployment benefits plunged to a six-week low, thereby reducing demand for the safety of the Yen.

Lastly, in the South Pacific, the Australian Dollar recouped its footing on speculation the widening of the country’s Trade Deficit won’t cause the Reserve Bank to cut interest rates. The Aussie rallied versus the majority of its peers as market investors speculated over whether policy makers would maintain the current interest rate when meeting later this month. New Zealand’s Dollar weakened as the MSCI Asia Pacific Index of Shares dipped 0.4 percent.

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EUR/USD- ECB Leaves Rate Unchanged
The Euro traded at the highest rate in eight weeks against the U.S. Dollar after the ECB’s President, Mario Draghi, stated that policy makers considered cutting the benchmark rate, but in the end decided to leave it at 0.75 percent. He added that inflation is still within the comfort zone and though the economy is facing serious challenges, a turn-around towards the end of 2013 was expected. Economists explained that the rally in the Spanish bond yields is proof positive that confidence has returned to the Euro-zone.