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Dollar slips as government rescues put into place

By TALI ARBEL
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Posted 15 October 2008 @ 06:59 am AEST

The dollar slid against most major currencies Tuesday as markets welcomed plans from governments to underpin ailing financial institutions and credit markets showed signs of thawing.

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as dollar government into place put rescues slips

The hope of a return to economic stability has boosted some of the emerging-market and European currencies this week which have taken hits against the dollar since this summer.

The 15-nation euro rose to $1.3650 in late afternoon trading from $1.3517 late Monday. On Friday, the euro had bottomed out at a 17-month low of $1.3257 as panic engulfed world markets.

The British pound rose to $1.7437 from $1.7280, while the dollar rose to 101.88 Japanese yen from 101.27 yen. The pound also hit a five-year low on Friday as well.

The yen, meanwhile, has been driven lower along with the dollar as traders regain some taste for risky trades.

In the U.S., the Treasury Dept. launched a $250 billion plan to buy stakes in financial companies. Nine major banks will participate at first, and the Bank of New York Mellon said Tuesday it would sell $3 billion of preferred shares to the government.

The Federal Reserve also said it would start buying up huge amounts of short-term debt starting Oct. 27 in order to shore up the commercial paper market.

"It hasn't been proven that it is the start of a new move for the dollar at all," said Meg Browne, senior currency strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman in New York. Government actions have "provided some temporary relief. Some of the currencies that have been hard hit are recovering somewhat. I don't think we can say we're out of the water yet...it remains to be seen how effective these policies will be."

Meanwhile, Europe put 1.7 trillion euros ($2.3 trillion) on the line Monday to protect the continent's banks, a figure that dwarfs the Bush administration's $700 billion rescue program, in its most unified response yet to the global financial crisis after a stumbling start.

The action by Germany, France, the Netherlands, Spain, Portugal, Austria and Britain came after weeks in which the governments often acted independently--a piecemeal approach that failed to stop steep and frightening slides on financial markets.

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