Spain sold 1.93 billion euro of 3- and 6-month bills. The yield on 3-month bills rose from 0.381% to 0.634%. At the same time, demand exceeded supply 7.6 times versus a bid-to-cover ratio of 3.5 in March. The 6-month yield rose from 0.84% to 1.58%, while the bid-to-cover fell from 5.6 to 3.3.
The Netherlands – one of the few European economies still rated AAA – sold 1.995 billion euro of 2- and 25-year government bonds, roughly in the middle of its target range, a day after Prime Minister Mark Rutte resigned in a crisis over budget cuts.
EUR/USD is little changed on the day. Resistance lies in the $1.3200/23 area. The pair remains trapped between 50-day MA on the upside and 100-day MA on the downside.
Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi: “There has been more chat about the resilience of the euro that's spooking some people out of playing it lower over the short-term, but there are some very significant risks ahead. As we move into May and June we could see further volatility and turmoil which we think will see the euro break below $1.30.”
Nomura Securities: “We expect euro/dollar to resume a weakening trend in coming weeks, with a break of $1.30 opening up a trading target of $1.25 within a 2-3 month horizon.”
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