FOREX-Dollar pressured by oil, stocks, data
* Euro steady at $1.5806 EUR=, near earlier 3-wk high
* Increased risk aversion benefits yen, Swissie
* Weak U.S. data contrasts with ECB rate hike expectations
By Toni Vorobyova
LONDON, June 30 (Reuters) - The dollar fell to a one-month low against a basket of major currencies on Monday, hurt by near record high oil prices, weaker equity markets and U.S. consumer confidence hitting a 28-year low.
Battered stocks and worries over the credit crunch scaled back expectations for how soon the Federal Reserve could boost interest rates after holding them at 2 percent last week.
In contrast, the euro has benefited from widespread expectations of a European Central Bank rate increase to 4.25 percent, while a pick up in risk aversion has boosted the low yielding yen and the safe haven Swiss franc.
"The dollar has been pressured from a number of channels: the relative pricing in central banks, the shift higher in the oil price and the very sharp declines in stock markets," said Teis Knuthsen, head of FX research at Danske Markets in Copenhagen.
"But we are also concerned that the markets are pricing in aggressively the risk of a series of rate hikes from the ECB ... so potentially there is a chance that euro/dollar could falter after the meeting."
The euro rose to a three-week high of $1.5817 EUR=, with analysts saying that a break of technical resistance around the $1.5850 mark could open the door for a move above April's record highs around $1.6020.
The dollar also hit three week lows at 105.52 yen JPY=, 1.0161 Swiss francs CHF= and set a one-month trough of 72.128 versus a trade-weighted basket of six major currencies .DXY.
The dollar came under additional pressure after U.S. financial shares fell on Friday on worries about more credit losses. Lehman Brothers forecast Merrill Lynch MER.N would write down another $5.4 billion in the second quarter, while Moody's said it may cut Morgan Stanley's (MS.N) credit rating.
With Friday's fall, the Dow Jones industrial average .DJI was down 14.5 percent for the year, and was more than 20 percent below its October 2007 peak at one point, meeting a traditional definition of a bear market.
GRIST TO THE MILL Continued...




