Euro Up Against Dollar As Rates Seen Staying Low

 

GEORGE FREY

FRANKFURT (AP) — The euro moved as high as $1.5011 in European trading Monday after the world's leading economies agreed to keep stimulus measures intact for the time being and as weak U.S. unemployment data suggested interest rates will not be hiked in coming months.

The 16-nation euro briefly touched $1.5011 in European afternoon trading before settling back to $1.4985, up from the $1.4835 late Friday in New York.

The British pound also rose to $1.6808 compared with $1.6602, while the dollar fell to 89.88 Japanese yen from 89.93 yen late Friday in New York.

The euro's 14-month high of $1.5061 was set October 26.

Over the weekend, finance ministers of the Group of 20 leading industrialized and developing economies said they would not yet withdraw economic stimulus measures until they saw proof of sustainable recovery. Some countries, such as the U.S., Japan and Germany, would like to start discussing strategies to unwind the measures, but they agreed to keep them in place for the time being.

That pushed investors to sell the dollar, which is typically bought as a safe haven.

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