Dollar Slides – Fed Confirms that the Credit Crunch Isn’t Getting Better.
May 6th, 2008 | By Doug Casey | Category: Politics & EconomicsIn the currency market, the dollar slipped against the euro. Late Monday, the euro was trading at $1.5491 vs. $1.5424 on Friday.
The buck declined despite some upbeat news from the Institute for Supply Management. The ISM said nonmanufacturing sectors of the U.S. economy expanded during April after three months of contraction. Its services index rose to 52.0% from 49.6% in March. That handily beat economists’ projections for a decline to 49.4%.
Analysts believe traders were locking in their gains from last week’s rally, which was based on signals from the Federal Reserve that it is near the end of its interest-rate cuts. The dollar index, which charts the greenback against a basket of currencies, rose 2.5% last week.
Currency strategists at Brown Brothers Harriman are of the opinion that the “pieces of the puzzle we believe will contribute to a U.S. dollar uptrend this year are beginning to fall into place, but more pieces are needed for a more significant U.S. dollar rally.”
But the good feelings were diluted considerably by a report from the Federal Reserve on the credit crunch, which continues.
More than half of the banks surveyed by the Fed said they had tightened commercial and industrial loans, commercial real estate loans, residential mortgages, and home-equity lines of credit. Almost no banks eased credit terms for any type of loan, the Fed said in its quarterly senior loan officer survey.
“The significant tightening of standards for consumer loans is probably the ugliest news of this report,” wrote Harm Bandholz, of UniCredit Markets. “Investment will continue to shrink, while private consumption growth will come to a halt or even turn negative” in the second quarter.
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