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The euro was steady at $1.3642, receding from a four-month low of $1.3503 touched on Thursday after the European Central Bank reduced all its main rates to record lows and unveiled a new series of measures to counter disinflation.
In other currencies, Chinese yuan leaped the most since January 2012 following its trade surplus almost doubled and the People's Bank of China bolstered its daily reference rate.
South Korea’s won climbed to the sturdies level in nearly six years on new ECB stimulus and better US
employment data. The currency increased 0.4% from June 5 to 1,016.50 per dollar at the close in Seoul.