The Swedish krona lost against the euro and the dollar today after the nations central bank unexpectedly cut its benchmark interest rate and stated that the recession is deeper than predicted.
The Swedish currency went down after a statement from Riksbank affirming that the current recession in the country requires broader measures to be halted, offering loans of 100 billion kronor ($13 billion) to domestic banks. The extreme majority of economists predicted the interest rates to remain unchanged, but a quarter point cut took the rates to a record low of 0.25 percent, followed by an statement affirming that such levels will persist until next years autumn, surprising traders, bankers, and analysts. Forecasts suggest that the Swedish economy will shrink 5.4 percent this year, the deepest recession among the Nordic countries, reflecting negatively on the krona outlook.
Economic analysis towards the Swedish economy are rather grim, pointing the relation of the global slump to the consequences it brought to Sweden, from Latvias economic collapse to the shrinking economy in North America, Sweden has been deeply affected, and the impact in the nations currency can be equally perceived by the devaluation of the countrys currency. A record low interest rate, which was set today by the Swedish central bank will weigh even further on the weakening kronas attractiveness.
EUR/SEK traded at 10.8150 as of 10:57 GMT from a previous rate of 10.7245. USD/SEK followed, rising to 7.6615 from 7.5959.
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