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The Euro is expected to continue its strong appreciation against the US dollar and could easily breakthrough the 1,30 psychological benchmark according to market analysts following the latest US labour market data released last week and the European Central Bank’s decision to keep basic interest rates unchanged at 2%.
Unemployment in the US actually dropped two tenths during December from 5,9 to 5,7% but the number of new jobs created was far lower than expected: a thousand, compared to the 43,000 of November.
Last week the Euro rise to record levels against the greenback had prompted Germany’s Economy and Labour Ministers to publicly call for a rate cut, but the European Central Bank, ECB, didn’t respond to the request.
In the first press conference of the year, January 8, ECB president Jean.Claude Trichet said that following “our regular economic and monetary analysis, we continue to judge the current stance of monetary policy as appropriate to preserve price stability over the medium term; accordingly, we have decided to leave the key ECB interest rates unchanged at their low levels”, adding that indicators point to an ongoing economic recovery in the euro area and, “although recent exchange rate developments are likely to have some dampening effects on exports, export growth should continue to benefit from the dynamic expansion of the world economy. Import price developments in the euro area should become somewhat more favourable, thereby helping to contain inflationary risks. We will continue to carefully monitor all developments that could affect our assessment of risks to price stability over the medium term”.
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