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Dollar gains on euro amid credit jitters

The dollar gained on the euro as investors turned to the greenback as a safe haven amid  fears of a looming financial credit crunch.

The euro was worth €1.3636 late on Friday, down from $1.3743 in New York on Thursday.

Analysts said that investors, anxious that a credit squeeze  brought on by a sharp deterioration in the key US housing market was about to materialise, were dumping shares for a second day in a row.

Analysts are concerned that the faltering US housing sector will  hurt banks and finance companies enough to curb the availability of  credit on which the economy feeds.

That, in turn, could hurt private equity groups because their  takeover bids are often financed by large amounts of bank debt.

Under such circumstances the dollar was finding favour as a safe-haven currency, notably as investors fear that weakness in the  US subprime market, where defaults were rising on loans made to  people with uncertain credit histories, could spread to Europe and  elsewhere.

The dollar eased a bit at one point Friday after a larger than  expected fall in core US inflation offset a robust set of second  quarter GDP figures.

Lower inflation suggests that the US Federal  Reserve will not raise interest rates, thereby putting downward  pressure on the US currency.