Daily Mail

Euro crashes to parity with dollar

Now it’s worth just $1.00005

- By John-Paul Ford Rojas

THE euro effectivel­y reached parity with the dollar yesterday as latest recession and inflation fears saw it wilt in the face of the rampaging greenback.

The single currency dipped as low as $1.00005, meaning it was just a fraction of a cent from hitting the same level as the US currency for the first time in two decades.

It has fallen 12pc against the dollar so far this year as the US Federal Reserve aggressive­ly hikes interest rates while the European Central Bank (ECB) has been more reticent even as inflation hits record levels.

Europe is facing a major economic slowdown that could worsen if Russia chokes off its gas supplies.

Elsewhere, fresh Covid-19 restrictio­ns imposed in some Chinese cities added to global downturn fears, sending the Brent crude oil benchmark below $100.

A stampede to the safety of the dollar has seen it trample rival currencies including the pound and the Japanese yen as well as the euro. Sterling shed a cent to hit a two-year low of $1.1808 – partly blamed on political uncertaint­y as the Tories selects a new prime minister – though it later recovered. The dollar, meanwhile, slipped back slightly against the yen having hit a 24year high on Monday.

US inflation figures due out today could drive further currency moves. A reading above the current 41-year high of 8.6pc will fuel speculatio­n that the Fed is preparing further large rate hikes.

The ECB, by contrast, has not raised rates since 2011, and while a hike is expected this month, the approach is more cautious than in the US amid fears of recession in the eurozone. Germany,

Europe’s biggest economy, is bearing the brunt of the continent’s energy crisis because of its reliance on Russian gas. Some citizens are already facing rationed heating and hot water and dimmed street lighting as the country seeks to conserve energy.

It could take a severe economic hit if Russia cuts off gas supplied via the Nord Stream 1 pipeline, which on Monday closed for ten days of maintenanc­e, though some worry it will not reopen. Yesterday the ZEW index, a gauge of German investor sentiment, fell to minus 53.8 points, the lowest reading since the eurozone crisis of 2011.

Alexander Krueger, chief economist at private bank Hauck Aufhaeuser Lampe, said: ‘Fear has taken the wheel. The threat of a stop to gas deliveries and the strong drop in real wages in particular are leading to the blues.’ Jordan Rochester, FX strategist at Nomura, expects the euro to dip to $0.95 next month, adding: ‘If Nord Stream 1 doesn’t resume operations we think $0.90 is a growing possibilit­y over the winter.’

The latest slump came on the same day that EU finance ministers approved Croatia becoming the 20th member of the single currency at the start of next year.

European Commission vice president Valdis Dombrovski­s said it confirmed that the euro remained ‘an attractive, resilient and successful global currency’.

Elsewhere, US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen discussed the dollar’s strength and yen’s depreciati­on during meetings with Japan’s finance minister and central bank governor in Tokyo.

But Yellen said they did not discuss interventi­on in the currency market, telling reporters that would be warranted only in ‘rare and exceptiona­l circumstan­ces’.

In 1985, the US, Germany, Japan, France and the UK agreed on coordinate­d action, during another period of dollar strength, to knock down the US currency’s values. But Jane Foley at Rabobank said the dollar’s current strength was a ‘text-book reaction’ to higher interest rates, and it ‘wouldn’t make sense for the US authoritie­s to oppose the stronger dollar while the Fed is aggressive­ly tightening monetary policy’.

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