Home

 
India Bullion iPhone Application
  Quick Links
Currency Futures Trading

MCX Strategy

Precious Metals Trading

IBCRR

Forex Brokers

Technicals

Precious Metals Trading

Economic Data

Commodity Futures Trading

Fixes

Live Forex Charts

Charts

World Gold Prices

Reports

Forex COMEX India

Contact Us

Chat

Bullion Trading Bullion Converter
 

$ Price :

 
 

Rupee :

 
 

Price in RS :

 
 
Specification
  More Links
Forex NCDEX India

Contracts

Live Gold Prices

Price Quotes

Gold Bullion Trading

Research

Forex MCX India

Partnerships

Gold Commodities

Holidays

Forex Currency Trading

Libor

Indian Currency

Advertisement

 
BLBG: Trichet, Lagarde Push China to Let Currency Gain Against Euro
 
By Francine Lacqua and Mark Deen


Oct. 5 (Bloomberg) -- European Central Bank President Jean- Claude Trichet led the region’s finance chiefs in pushing China to let the yuan strengthen amid mounting concern the euro is shouldering too much of the burden of a sliding dollar.

Some currencies “have in the medium run to appreciate,” Trichet said in an interview with Bloomberg Television in Istanbul today. Earlier, French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde told Bloomberg that Europe’s recovery doesn’t justify further gains in the euro against the dollar.

The officials want China to do more to rebalance the world economy after it kept the yuan largely unchanged versus the dollar for more than a year, aiding its exporters and exposing those elsewhere to the dollar’s dive. The euro has gained about 16 percent versus the dollar since May, raising concern among policy makers that it could slow their economy’s rebound from the worst recession since World War II.

“We need a rebalancing so that one currency doesn’t take the flak for the others” Lagarde said. “The European economy is not doing badly but it’s not doing so well that its currency can be the ultimate recourse.”

Trichet and Lagarde spoke two days after the G-7 published a statement repeating its mantra that volatility in exchange rates hurts economic growth. The communiqué didn’t single out the dollar or ratchet up rhetoric toward China, which is part of the G-20 club anointed by world leaders two weeks ago as the world’s primary forum for global economic cooperation.

‘Strong Dollar’

The dollar fell today, weakening to $1.4605 per euro at 8:40 a.m. in New York, from $1.4576 on Oct. 2.

The G-7 statement nevertheless “clearly says excess volatility is not welcome” in exchange rates, Trichet said in the interview. He appreciates “enormously” the U.S. Treasury’s stated preference for a “strong dollar.”

Finance officials are gathering in Istanbul for the annual meetings of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. They meet as the world’s major economies look to pursue policies that even-out so-called global imbalances, marked by a U.S. trade deficit and Chinese current account surplus, which they blame for helping trigger the recent financial crisis.

ECB Executive Board member Lorenzo Bini-Smaghi joined the chorus in calling on China to tie their currency less to the dollar and, by extension, the monetary policy of the U.S. Federal Reserve.

“The best way is that China starts adopting its own monetary policy and detach itself from the Fed’s policy,” said he said in a panel discussion in Istanbul.

Chinese Basket

China, which intervenes to control its currency’s value with reference to a basket of currencies including the euro, is often slow to respond to diplomatic pushes for a more flexible exchange rate. It took almost two years of international lobbying for it to break a peg with the dollar in July 2005. Economists and academics are unconvinced it will respond this time.

Further weakness in the U.S. currency means “we could get a battle of the printing presses as the Chinese try to match the printing of dollars by printing their own currency,” Harvard University Professor Niall Ferguson said in an Oct. 3 interview in Istanbul. New York University Professor Nouriel Roubini said that China has returned to an “effective peg by intervening and preventing any further appreciation of the yuan.”

On ECB monetary policy, Trichet said that the cenral bank has no precommitment on when to withdraw the emergency measures introduced to fight the financial crisis.

The central bank will do what’s necessary “when the time comes,” he said.

Source