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Dublin: 10 °C Wednesday 19 June, 2013

Euro falls amid concerns over Spanish debt and falling economic sentiment

Euro trading lower against US dollar.

Image: Tim Ockenden/PA Archive/Press Association Images

THE EURO HAS fallen to its lowest level against the dollar in almost two years amid increasing concern over Spain’s rising borrowing costs and the release of data today which shows a drop in economic sentiment across the eurozone.

At the time of writing, the euro was trading at $1.2426 and at GB£0.7982.

Today Commissioner Olli Rehn said that Spain should be given an extra year to meet its deficit targets, but that this extension should only be granted if the government can effectively control excessive spending in the semi-autonomous regions and present “solid two-year budget plans for 2013 and 2014″.

Meanwhile, the European Commission said today that the latest economic sentiment indicator had fallen 2.3 points between April and May to 90.6. The sentiment index fell by 2.7 points across the entire EU to 90.5.

The sharpest sentiment drops were reported in the UK (down 4.7 points), Italy (down 4.3) and the Netherlands (3.9)

May 2012

Confidence in industry and production expectations also dropped in May, as did construction confidence and retail trade confidence.

However, consumer confidence improved by 0.8 points in the EU and 0.6 points in the eurozone, though consumers’ assessment of their personal financial situation remained unchanged across the EU and dropped slightly in the eurozone.

- Additional reporting by the AP

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Comments (6 Comments)

  • Double standards Olli Rein!!

    Reply
  • The Euro is screwed, fukd, stick a fork in it’s ass and turn it over its done. We’re now holding a referendum on signing a toilet paper treaty that solves nothing. The whole thing is an incredible waste of time and taxpayers money.

    Reply
    • Fagan's 30/05/12 #

      A Euro minus 7 or 8 of the countries that are not suited to it, or it to they, could still survive.

      If they keep the current hodge podge of unrelated and very different economies in the one currency, then it is going to have to become a Lira, to keep it a float.

      Reply
  • Do people voting ‘Yes’ read articles like this? Can’t they the Treaty is a duff political event designed to appease anxious German voters? The political class frog march the citizens into an EU Superstate?

    Reply
  • RonA 31/05/12 #

    I wonder does anyone realise that leaving the Euro will spiral us into sever depression in the short term with a very unstable punt. But in the longer term we could emerge more stable. Dropping the euro will cause some external investors and company’s to leave, inflation as an importing country will spiral. Euro mortgages and trackers will have to walk away from their homes and saving will quickly devalue.

    Its easy to say leave the euro, but in the state this country is in its a whole different thing to actually do it. Personally I am still 50/50 because I have the option to leave, abandon my house if goes tits up because my job is not tied in any way to Ireland. But can you take the risk????

    Reply
  • another reason for ireland to get rid off the euro…

    Reply

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