Euro slips from three-year peak on ECB officials' remarks, bitcoin sags

Reuters

Published Jan 17, 2018 03:54PM ET

Euro slips from three-year peak on ECB officials' remarks, bitcoin sags

By Richard Leong

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The euro fell on Wednesday, pulling back from a three-year high above $1.23 as some European Central Bank officials voiced worries about the currency's strength.

The euro's decline helped stabilize the greenback, which also had brief support from a weaker Canadian dollar after the Bank of Canada struck a cautious tone along with an expected rate hike on Wednesday.

The outlook for the dollar, however, remains dour on the view that other central banks besides the Federal Reserve are moving away from the ultra low-rate stance and unconventional tools they adopted after the 2008 global credit crisis.

"There's still a lot of bearish sentiment on the dollar," said Minh Trang, senior foreign currency trader at Silicon Valley Bank in Santa Clara, California.

Still, the greenback snapped a four-session losing streak.

At 3:12 p.m. (2012 GMT), the index that tracks the dollar against a basket of currencies was up 0.26 percent at 90.629. It hit a three-year low of 90.113 earlier.

The Canadian dollar rose 0.17 percent to C$1.2411. It weakened briefly after the BOC policy statement.

The euro was down 0.29 percent at $1.2223 after hitting a three-year peak versus the greenback at $1.2322.

Digital currencies suffered another day of heavy losses on worries about a widening regulatory crackdown.

Bitcoin (BTC=BTSP) fell more than 10 percent to below $10,000 for the first time since Dec. 1 on the Luxembourg-based Bitstamp exchange. The biggest digital currency has lost half its value since it peaked near $20,000 about a month ago.

ECB WEIGHS IN ON RISING EURO

The speed of the euro's rise in early 2018 - up more than 3 percent in the last two weeks - has prompted comments from ECB officials, highlighting growing concerns, according to analysts.

ECB policymaker Ewald Nowotny told reporters on Wednesday the euro's recent strength against the dollar is "not helpful," which encouraged a bout of profit-taking before a policy meeting next week.

In an interview with Italian newspaper la Repubblica Vitor Constancio, the ECB vice president, said he did not rule out that monetary policy would still continue to be "very accommodating for a long time".