The euro climbed against the dollar to within a cent of a
record high after European Central Bank governing council
member Christian Noyer signaled policy makers may raise interest
rates.
Europe's single currency also advanced before the release
of a private report economists say will show U.S. sales of
previously owned homes fell in March, reinforcing speculation
the Federal Reserve will keep cutting borrowing costs to shore
up the economy. The Canadian dollar declined before a central
bank meeting forecast to end with a half-percentage point
cut in the benchmark rate.
``In this environment the rhetoric from the ECB, especially
the hardliners, remains strong and the market's taking that
on board,'' said Jeremy Stretch, a senior market strategist
in London at Rabobank International, the third-largest Dutch
bank. ``With fears about more negativity in the U.S. housing
market, it looks like the euro-dollar's going to be biased
on the upside.''
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The euro traded as high as $1.5969 and was at $1.5930 as
of 6:51 a.m. in New York, from $1.5912 yesterday. It climbed
to a record $1.5983 on April 17. The currency rose to 164.49
yen, advancing from a low of 163.29 today. The dollar was
little changed at 103.27 per yen.
The Canadian dollar declined on speculation the nation's
central bank will cut its main rate to the lowest level since
December 2005, to help boost the economy as exports fall to
the U.S., the nation's biggest trading partner. The central
bank will cut its main rate to 3 percent, according to economists
in a Bloomberg News survey.
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