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Euro skids versus safe-havens as Ukraine tensions ramp up

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The euro weakened and safe-haven currencies including the US dollar were in demand on Thursday amid intensifying fears of an imminent full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine.

The greenback, yen and Swiss franc all rose back toward multi-week highs to Europe’s single currency, while the greenback hovered near a one-week peak versus major peers after US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said he believes Russia will invade Ukraine within hours.

Riskier commodity-linked currencies also tumbled, succumbing to worsening risk sentiment after earlier in the week proving resilient due to high commodity prices.

Ukraine has declared a state of emergency and Moscow began evacuating its Kyiv embassy, while the West slapped Russia with sanctions.

The euro fell as much as 0.26% to $1.12750, the lowest level since February 3.

It declined 0.29% to 129.640 yen, approaching Tuesday’s low of 129.360, its weakest since February 3.

It slipped 0.22% to 1.03550 franc, closing in on Tuesday’s trough at 1.03405, which was the lowest since January 24.

The US dollar index – which gauges the currency against six major peers, including the euro, yen and Swiss franc- rose as much as 0.19% to 96.372 for the first time since February 14.

“We’re definitely seeing a knee-jerk reaction to Blinken’s comments,” with haven currencies in demand and the euro and commodity currencies sold off, said Joseph Capurso, a strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia.

“The situation certainly looks like it’s going to get worse before it gets better.”

The Australian dollar dropped 0.33% to $0.72075 and the New Zealand dollar slid 0.41% to $0.67475.

Sterling lost 0.08% to $1.35340.

 

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