Euro sinks on poor eurozone growth data

Euro sinks on poor eurozone growth data
Updated on

Summary The euro fell against dollar on poor eurozone growth data.

 

NEW YORK (AFP) - A fresh report showing the eurozone still mired ina pause in its downward slide.

 

The euro was flat in early Asian trade but slid immediately after EU data agency Eurostat reported the eurozone economy shrank 0.2 percent in the January-March quarter, the sixth consecutive quarterly contraction.

 

At 2100 GMT, the euro bought $1.2884, down from 1.2924 late Tuesday. The common currency pulled off its day s low of $1.2843 in afternoon US trade.

 

Meanwhile the dollar recession sent the euro falling again Wednesday while the Japanese yen took dged slightly lower against the yen, to 102.23 yen from 102.31, while the euro slipped to 131.72 yen from 132.23.

 

The first-quarter eurozone growth data was the key catalyst. The recession eased somewhat from the 0.6 percent contraction of the final quarter of 2012.

 

But while core economy Germany clambered out of negative territory with 0.1 percent growth, France fell back into recession, shrinking 0.2 percent.

 

And both Italy and Spain posted 0.5 percent first-quarter declines.

 

"Not a single aspect of any report -- neither the quarterly nor the yearly readings -- beat expectations," said Christopher Vecchio of DailyFX.

 

"The biggest disappointment, of course, has to be Germany, which saw the economy grow at 0.1 percent quarter on quarter, but contract by 0.2 percent year-on-year."

 

IG sales trader Yusuf Heusen that the eurozone data "was unsurprisingly weak, reminding us that while we are no longer expecting a Spanish or Italian bailout on a daily basis, the overall situation remains dire."

 

The pound recovered somewhat against the dollar after a steady fall, rising to $1.5230 from $1.5211.

 

The dollar eased against the Swiss franc, to 0.9647 franc from 0.9664 franc.
 

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