NEW YORK (Reuters) - The U.S. dollar fell against the euro on Tuesday after St. Louis Federal Reserve President James Bullard dented expectations the U.S.
US dollar rises to AR$ 5.255; 'blue' rate lower. The US dollar official rate was higher today at exchange houses at AR$5.255 for its selling price while the black market dollar kept falling.
KINGSTON, Jamaica - The Jamaican dollar today strengthened marginally against its US counterpart to trade at an average $98.96, three cents lower than it closed on Friday.
The dollar continued its advance against the yen on Tuesday after a Japanese minister watered down previous remarks suggesting the yen had weakened enough, but gains were capped before Wednesday's testimony from U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman ...
Gold Silver GLD IAU SLV After seven straight session losses, Gold reversed course on Monday posting a strong gain. The precious metal's fortunes improved as equities slipped and the U.S. dollar declined against other currencies. Gold futures for June ...
Center for Research on Globalization - May 19, 2013
Quantitative Easing is the term given to the Federal Reserve's policy of printing 1,000 billion new dollars annually in order to finance the US budget deficit by purchasing US Treasury bonds and to keep the prices high of debt-related derivatives on ...
He cited the example of Singapore's currency regime - whereby the Singapore dollar trades against a basket of trading partners' currencies in an adjustable band - as an inspiration for Qatar as well as Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Bahrain, which plan to ...
HSBC picks Indian rupee as one of two Asian currencies along with the yuan that can hold their own in a climate of sticky JPY weakness, a more moderate pace of Chinese expansion, and increasing debate over Fed's quantitative easing.
USD/CAD remains at high levels, as the pair continues to flirt with the 1.03 line. In early North American trading, USD/CAD was trading in the high-1.02 range.
A set of better-than-expected Q1 earnings reports, a marginally improving jobs picture, falling demand for raw materials globally and an increase in central bank interest rate cuts have helped the U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) resume its upward path.
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