- Portugal announces last year's budget deficit was much larger than they thought.
- They are expected to request a bailout at any time.
- Ireland says they will need another ââ¬24 billion to stabilize their banks
- Their debt insurance and yields are up
- "Late Wednesday, a plan to merge four troubled savings banks in Spain collapsed..." (http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/01/business/global/01geithner.html)
...... and yet... EURUSD is over 1.42 now.
I don't get it.
The only related item I could find on Bloomberg is a cryptic throwaway sentence in a general article about currencies: "The dollar weakened against the euro after New York Federal Reserve President William Dudley said not to be ââ¬Åoverly optimistic about the growth outlook.ââ¬Â
This seems weak. Nobody was expecting stellar growth in the US. Growth prospects in the US may not be great, but on the other hand, 2 US states are not in bankruptcy with 2 or 3 others expected to follow at any moment. Not to mention that the French and German govts are still at each other's throats every day, as last week.
Also, they say IN THE SAME ARTICLE that Canadian and Mexican currencies are *UP* on strong growth prospects in the US. (http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-...-increase-u-s-strength-may-spur-fed-move.html)
So what's going on here....??
- They are expected to request a bailout at any time.
- Ireland says they will need another ââ¬24 billion to stabilize their banks
- Their debt insurance and yields are up
- "Late Wednesday, a plan to merge four troubled savings banks in Spain collapsed..." (http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/01/business/global/01geithner.html)
...... and yet... EURUSD is over 1.42 now.
I don't get it.
The only related item I could find on Bloomberg is a cryptic throwaway sentence in a general article about currencies: "The dollar weakened against the euro after New York Federal Reserve President William Dudley said not to be ââ¬Åoverly optimistic about the growth outlook.ââ¬Â
This seems weak. Nobody was expecting stellar growth in the US. Growth prospects in the US may not be great, but on the other hand, 2 US states are not in bankruptcy with 2 or 3 others expected to follow at any moment. Not to mention that the French and German govts are still at each other's throats every day, as last week.
Also, they say IN THE SAME ARTICLE that Canadian and Mexican currencies are *UP* on strong growth prospects in the US. (http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-...-increase-u-s-strength-may-spur-fed-move.html)
So what's going on here....??