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Dollar slides on higher US inflation, oil gain

Dollar slides on higher US inflation, oil gain
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NEW YORK (AP) -- The dollar turned lower Tuesday morning as the U.S. government said wholesale inflation shot higher in July and the pace of new home construction last month fell to a 17-year low. Crude oil futures, meanwhile, headed back up above $113 a barrel.

The 15-nation euro rose to $1.4725 in morning trading from $1.4697 late Monday.

The British pound edged up to $1.8645 from $1.8643, while the dollar slid to 109.65 Japanese yen from 110.17 yen.

Investing in oil futures has been a hedge for investors against a sliding dollar. But when oil drops, that helps the dollar look more attractive and stokes its upward momentum.

The Labor Department said Tuesday that the prices producers pay climbed 1.2 percent in July, boosting the annual rate to the fastest pact in 27 years. Core prices, which leave out food and energy costs, rose 0.7 percent, more than three times what economists had expected.

On the housing front, the Commerce Department said that housing starts fell to 965,000 units in July, the smallest amount since March 1991. But that paltry showing still beat expectations, even as it underscored the housing sector's distress.

"The numbers only point in one direction: Higher Fed interest rates. The problem is the timing. Those numbers are kind of impotent, and so is the Fed," Joseph Trevisani, chief market analyst at FX Solutions. "The economy's simply not in a position where the Fed can raise rates."

Higher interest rates can support a currency by giving investors higher returns, while containing inflation and weighing on economic growth. Cutting interest rates often sends currencies lower as investors look to transfer funds to higher-yielding assets.

In Europe, the ZEW index, which records investors' six-month expectations for the German economy, rose to negative 55.5 points in August from a 16-year low of negative 63.9 points in July, said Germany's Center for Economic Research, besting expectations.

Germany is the euro zone's largest economy.

The euro fell to the $1.50 mark for the first time in six months Aug. 8, after the European Central Bank dashed expectations that it might continue raising interest rates amid fears of a European slowdown. The Federal Reserve, which cut rates seven times from September until a "pause" in June, may eventually have to hike rates here, however, to combat growing inflation, analysts say.

In other morning New York trading, the dollar fell to 1.0617 Canadian dollars from 1.0640, and slipped to 1.0938 Swiss francs from 1.0978 francs.

Copyright 2012 nwitimes.com. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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