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  FOREX-Top Headlines on Monday Morning

>> Monday, February 16, 2009

Yen Rises, South Korean Won drops to two month low:
The yen climbed to 91.65 against the dollar as of 2 p.m. in Tokyo from 91.93 late in New York on Feb. 13
in forex trading. It advanced to 116.92 per euro from 118.37. Japan’s currency gained 1.2 percent to 59.63 versus Australia’s dollar and rose 1.1 percent to 47.50 against New Zealand’s dollar. The U.S. dollar gained to $1.2756 per euro from $1.2862 in New York last week, and climbed to 1.1668 Swiss francs from 1.1590. The British pound fell 1 percent to $1.4214 and weakened 0.2 percent to 89.75 pence per euro.

The yen snapped two days of losses against the dollar from the Friday session last week.

South Korea’s won shed 11 percent this year, the biggest drop among the 10 most-traded Asian currencies outside Japan, on concern that a deepening global economic slump will discourage investors from buying emerging-market assets.
A forecast revealed the Korean economy will shrink 6 percent this year as the world recession takes a bigger toll on over-leveraged households and smaller companies than during the 1998 Asian crisis.


Geithner Pressed By G-7 to Push Ahead With Bank Bailout Plan:

Finance chiefs from the Group of Seven nations joined the chorus of U.S. investors and lawmakers pushing Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner to move faster to fix the banking system. The G-7 repeated its traditional message that “excess volatility” and “disorderly movements” in exchange rates must be avoided. The group accounts for about two-thirds of the world economy composing of the U.S., Japan, Germany, U.K., Italy, Canada and France. The yen rose against the euro and the dollar after finance ministers from the Group of Seven nations said the “severe” global slump will persist for most of 2009 and Japan’s economy shrank by the most since 1974, spurring investors to sell riskier assets.

White House dampens stimulus expectations:

President Barack Obama's aides warned Americans on Sunday not to expect instant miracles from the $787 billion economic stimulus bill he will sign this week, but said it would help eventually. "The acceleration in job loss probably means that this economy is going to get worse before it gets better," he said. The Republicans kept up their criticism on the bill saying it is incredibly expensive. “It has hundreds of billions of dollars in projects which will not yield in jobs," said John McCain, whom Obama defeated in last year's presidential election.

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