Friday, November 26, 2010

Euro falls as debt fears persist

26 November 2010 Last updated at 09:51 GMT

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The euro has fallen again as fears that the Irish debt crisis may spread to other European economies continue to grip currency markets.



LAST UPDATED AT 26 NOV 2010, 11:20 GMT*CHART SHOWS LOCAL TIMEEUR:USD intraday chart
€1 buyschange%
1.3213-
-0.01
-
-1.10





The euro fell one cent against the dollar in early trading to $1.3265. It has now fallen by almost four cents, or 3%, this week.

The Portuguese parliament is voting later on billions of euros of proposed austerity measures.
Many commentators say Portugal will be next in line for a bail-out.
Reports in the Financial Times Deutschland suggest that some eurozone countries and the European Central Bank are putting pressure on the country to ask for financial assistance.
However, the Portuguese government said the reports were "completely false".
Spending cuts
This week's fall in the euro was triggered by the Irish Republic's request for financial assistance last weekend.
It is currently negotiating with the European Union (EU) and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) over a rescue package expected to amount to 85bn euros ($113bn; £72bn).
The Republic will be the second eurozone economy to be rescued, after Greece was granted a 110bn-euro bail-out over the summer.
In order to tackle its high budget deficit, and meet conditions of any loan package, the Irish government unveiled a tough recovery plan on Wednesday, designed to save 15bn euros over the next four years, which will be voted on next month.
However, the impending EU/IMF bail-out has failed to calm investors' fears that the Irish debt crisis could spread to other countries with high budget deficits, particularly Portugal and Spain.
Government bond yields - an important indicator of investor confidence - have also risen this week, but were virtually unchanged on Friday.
Portugal will vote later on its own austerity budget, which outlines measures to cut the country's deficit from 7.3% of economic output this year to 4.6% in 2011.
It proposes public spending cuts and raising VAT - measures that have proved very unpopular with voters. ( bbc)
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