iFOREX Daily Analysis : December 09, 2016

 | Dec 09, 2016 04:21AM ET

The dollar extended gains against the other majors currencies on Thursday, after the European Central Bank’s latest policy decision and positive a U.S. jobless claims report.

The euro weakened broadly after the ECB said at its monthly policy meeting that it would extend its asset purchase program for an additional nine months.

Beyond the program’s scheduled end in March 2017, the central bank said net asset purchases are intended to continue at a monthly pace of €60 billion until the end of December 2017, or beyond, if necessary. In addition, the ECB left its benchmark interest rate unchanged at a record-low of zero, in line with forecasts.

In the U.S., the Labor Department said initial jobless claims fell by 10,000 to 258,000 in the week ending December 2, in line with expectations.

Today the U.S. is to round up the week with a preliminary reading on consumer sentiment for December from the University of Michigan.

EUR/USD

The euro surged before a press briefing by the European Central Bank earlier on Thursday, but declined immediately after that, and settled a bit lower for the day, closing at 1.0615, down 0.1%.

The euro dropped after the European Central Bank extended asset purchases until the end of next year and President Mario Draghi said cuts to the size of the program should not be viewed as tapering.

The ECB said it will reduce its asset buys to 60 billion euros from next April from the current 80 billion euros, and extend purchase by an extra nine months from March.

It also reserved the right to increase the size of purchases once again. Forecasts of European inflation of 1.7% by the end of 2019 were not in alignment with the ECB’s target rate of under 2%.

Investors think ECB policy is likely to remain loose for some time, with an interest rate hike not anticipated for years.