In November, the U.S. Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against  six major U.S. trading partners including the euro, yen and pound, rose  5.09%. This was driven partly by rising bond yields and signs of economic recovery that raised the appeal  of U.S. assets. But the most recent gains also had to do with economic uncertainty in  Europe. The region's debt crisis unfolded earlier this year with a  bailout in May to prevent Greece from defaulting. Now it looks as if the  dominoes might continue to fall as observers watch Portugal, Spain and  others closely following the $113 billion bailout package European  officials presented to Ireland on Sunday.
     Earlier this week, the dollar soared against the euro and other major  currencies when a rescue deal for debt-troubled Ireland failed to calm  investors worried that the debt crisis might spread. At one point on  Monday, a day after European officials announced Ireland's bailout  package,the euro fell below $1.31 for the first time since September 21. The  British pound fell to $1.5565 from $1.5602 and the dollar rose to 84.24  Japanese yen from 84.07 yen.
     However, the dollar's rise in the backdrop of Europe's demise might likely be  temporary. After all, the U.S., though probably not to the scale of  Ireland and other European countries, has its own debt problems that  officials are trying to solve. And some central bankers and even the  United Nations have said the greenback's value has been too volatile to  be the world's primary reserve currency.
 
It seems that the dollars strengthening is mor eof a result of Europes hardships than anything the United States is really doing. In some of the other posts I've read it sounds as though some aspects of our economy are coming back to life. Even with that being said it is not the economy as much as the environment that is strengthening the value of the dollar against other world currnecies.
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