Euro hits new low, European stocks fall as ECB starts QE
Sentiment was also weighed down by concerns over Greece, with Athens due to present its reform plans to Brussels in order to secure a financial lifeline.
During Asian trading hours, the euro sank to \\$1.0823, last seen in September 2003, having hit a similar low on Friday as upbeat US payrolls data boosted expectations for a Federal Reserve rate hike.
"Strong US nonfarm payroll numbers punished the euro on Friday, but this morning's roll-out of the eurozone's QE programme saw the single currency drop even further," said ETX Capital analyst Daniel Sugarman.
In afternoon London deals, the euro recovered to \\$1.0869, up from \\$1.0842 late in New York on Friday.
The Frankfurt-based ECB announced Monday that it and the national central banks of the euro area have started buying bonds as part of the long-awaited purchase programme, known as quantitative easing, aimed at warding off deflation.
Further details about the purchases -- the amounts or whether they were public or private-sector bonds -- were not immediately available.
European stocks fell as investors took profits from last week's ECB-inspired gains.
In afternoon deals on Monday, London's benchmark FTSE 100 index of leading companies dropped 0.58 percent to 6,871.82 points.
Frankfurt's DAX 30 slipped 0.05 percent to 11,545.54 points and the CAC 40 index in Paris lost 0.57 percent to 4,935.25 points compared with Friday's close.
In New York, US stocks opened higher Monday after General Motors jumped on a share buyback and Apple rose ahead of the expected launch of its Apple Watch.
Five minutes into trade, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was at 17,902.99, up 0.26 percent.
The broad-based S&P 500 rose 0.17 percent to 2,074.82, while the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite Index added 0.11 percent to 4,932.90.
Some analysts predict the eurozone unit could reach parity against the dollar, amid a growing policy divergence between the ECB and the Fed.
The US Federal Reserve had ended its own QE programme in October.
"The euro looks likely to remain weak over the coming weeks given that the ECB and Federal Reserve appear on diverging tracks in terms of monetary policy," CMC Markets analyst Michael Hewson told AFP.
"With yield spreads between US treasuries and German bunds wider than they have ever been, the prospect of further euro losses towards parity remains a distinct possibility in the coming weeks."
In company news, Lloyds Banking Group (LBG) shares slid 0.80 percent to 80.78 pence in afternoon deals, after the British government sold another 1.0 percent in the state-rescued lender for ?500 million (\\$754 million, 694 million euros), matching last month's sale.
The Treasury announced in a statement that the move has trimmed its stake from 24 percent to just under 23 percent, under plans to return LBG to private hands.
Britain still owns a large chunk of Lloyds after bailing it out with ?20 billion of taxpayers' cash at the height of the 2008 global financial crisis.
Asian equities mostly fell Monday, dragged down by expectations the US could soon raise interest rates, while Tokyo took a hit from news Japan's economy grew slower than thought in the last quarter of 2014.
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