Connect with us
  • tg

Forex

Morning Bid: Yen and yuan feel the pain

letizo News

Published

on

Morning Bid: Yen and yuan feel the pain
© Reuters. A Japanese 1,000 yen banknote and Chinese 100 yuan banknotes are seen in this picture illustration in Beijing, China, January 21, 2016. REUTERS/Jason Lee/File photo

A look at the day ahead in European and global markets from Rae Wee

Markets have been betting on a dollar downturn for months on the view that U.S. rates would eventually have to fall at some point this year. Until now, that has been wishful thinking.

The yen and the yuan were the latest to fall prey to a resurgent dollar on Friday, with the Japanese currency slipping deeper into intervention territory and the breaching a key level against the greenback.

Respective authorities stepped in to defend the currencies, but their efforts were in vain.

Since the Bank of Japan’s landmark rate hike on Tuesday, the yen has fallen more than 1% against the dollar. That’s left it just a whisker away from 2022’s multi-decade low, as the highly-anticipated move had counter-intuitively sent it into free fall with traders scurrying back into popular ‘carry trades’.

Japanese government officials have kept up their verbal defence of the currency, keeping investors on their toes for any signs of intervention.

The yen’s weakness also spilled over to the yuan which weakened past the psychologically important 7.2 per dollar level on Friday and prompted state-owned banks to step in to buy the yuan for dollars.

NO END IN SIGHT

With the dollar having been in the driver’s seat for the most part of the past two years since the Federal Reserve kicked off its flurry of rate hikes, analysts had, at the end of last year, expected its rally to stall come 2024.

Yet, any fall in the greenback has so far been short lived. Its latest move lower came after the Fed this week maintained its projection for three rate cuts this year.

In less than 24 hours, however, the dollar was back in favour after a surprise rate cut from the Swiss National Bank and a dovish tilt from the Bank of England (BoE) sparked selling

in the Swiss franc and sterling for dollars.

That ramped up expectations for a June rate cut by the European Central Bank and the BoE, but less so for the Fed.

“It just doesn’t seem that there’s an automatic sense that when the Fed cuts rates, there’s got to be some dollar easing if the ECB and other central banks in the G10 in particular, are doing the same or perhaps even more,” said Rob Carnell, ING’s regional head of research for Asia-Pacific.

That’s going to mean more pain for emerging Asia, in particular, given a rising dollar pressures their currencies and makes it harder for their central banks to ease monetary policy.

Key developments that could influence markets on Friday:

– UK retail sales (February)

– Germany import prices (January)

– Reopening of 1-month, 3-month and 6-month UK government debt auctions

Forex

More yen weakness likely – BOA Securities survey

letizo News

Published

on

Investing.com – More Japanese yen weakness looks likely, according to Bank of America Securities, citing its latest foreign exchange and rates sentiment survey.

At 10:25 ET (14:25 GMT), traded 0.2% higher at ¥155.83, with the pair having gained just under 2% this week as yen weakness returned.

Japanese authorities are seen having spent almost $60 billion the previous week pulling the yen away from a 34-year-low of ¥160.24 versus the dollar.

The bank’s survey has shown a consistently bullish yen bias since mid-2022, analysts at BOA Securities said, until now. 

With USDJPY breaching new highs in April, investors have flipped to the largest JPY short since 2022, and there is a deep scepticism around the effectiveness of Japan’s FX intervention.

The bank said the majority of fund managers polled expect USDJPY to retest ¥160, with no one expecting a reversal to ¥150. 

“While we generally share these views, the volte-face on JPY perhaps warrants near-term caution for shorts,” the bank added.

 

 

Continue Reading

Forex

Dollar calm at end of week; sterling gains on growth data

letizo News

Published

on

Investing.com – The U.S. dollar steadied Friday after losing ground the previous session on weak jobs data, while the pound gained in the wake of stronger-than-expected growth numbers.

At 04:10 ET (08:10 GMT), the Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six other currencies, traded just higher at 105.115.

Dollar on track for small gains this week

The dollar steadied Friday, and is course for minor gains this week after losses on Thursday following the release of data showed a bigger-than-expected increase in weekly j.

This evidence of a cooling U.S. labor market reinforced some expectations that the will begin cutting interest rates by September. 

However, sticky inflation remains a key point of contention for the Fed, with a slew of officials warning as much this week, comments which boosted the dollar this week.

There is “considerable” uncertainty about where U.S. inflation will head in coming months, San Francisco Federal Reserve President Mary Daly said on Thursday.

“In a scenario where inflation stays … level, just doesn’t make much further progress, then it’s not appropriate to start adjusting the rate unless we see the labor market faltering,” she added.

These comments put upcoming data, due next week, squarely in focus for more cues on interest rates.

Sterling benefits from strong growth data

In Europe, gained 0.1% to 1.2534, recovering from its lowest level since April 24 on Thursday, after data released earlier Friday showed that Britain’s economy grew by the most in nearly three years in the first quarter of 2024.

3rd party Ad. Not an offer or recommendation by Investing.com. See disclosure here or
remove ads
.

U.K. expanded by 0.6% in the three months to March, the strongest growth since the fourth quarter of 2021, as the country’s economy exited the shallow recession it entered in the second half of last year.

On a monthly basis, the grew by 0.4% in March, faster than the 0.1% growth forecast.

The held interest rates at a 16-year high on Thursday, but two of the nine-person Monetary Policy Committee voted for a cut, suggesting that the central bank is moving towards such a reduction.

traded largely unchanged at 1.0783, with a light data calendar providing little impetus.

The has all but promised a rate cut on June 6, but uncertainty exists over how many further cuts the central bank will agree to this year.

Pierre Wunsch, Belgium’s central bank governor, made the case for further moves earlier this week, arguing that staying tight for too long was now a bigger risk than easing too early.

Markets currently price in 70 basis points of rate hikes for this year.

USD/JPY drifts higher

In Asia, rose 0.2% to 155.70, trading well above lows of 152 it had hit earlier in May. 

Traders now see the 160 level as the new line in the sand for Japanese government intervention.

rose 0.1% to 7.2249, with the yuan weakening following reports saying U.S. President Joe Biden was considering imposing fresh sanctions on certain Chinese industries, such as electric vehicles and batteries. 

3rd party Ad. Not an offer or recommendation by Investing.com. See disclosure here or
remove ads
.

While the economic impact of the tariffs was unclear, such measures could attract retaliation from China, further souring ties between the world’s two biggest economies. 

 

Continue Reading

Forex

Asia FX weak with US inflation in sight; China tariff fears dent yuan

letizo News

Published

on

Investing.com– Most Asian currencies moved little on Friday as the dollar steadied from overnight declines, with focus turning squarely towards key U.S. inflation data due next week, which is likely to provide more cues on interest rates.

The Chinese yuan declined, as did currencies with trade exposure to China after multiple reports said that the U.S. was preparing more trade tariffs on Beijing. 

Regional currencies took little support from an overnight decline in the dollar, as more signs of a cooling labor market reinforced bets that the Federal Reserve will cut rates in September. 

But the dollar steadied in Asian trade, pressuring regional currencies as uncertainty ahead of key U.S. inflation data next week kept traders largely biased towards the greenback. 

Chinese yuan weakens, USDCNY up on tariff reports 

The Chinese yuan’s pair rose 0.1% as multiple reports said U.S. President Joe Biden was considering imposing fresh sanctions on certain Chinese industries, such as electric vehicles and batteries. 

While the economic impact of the tariffs was unclear, such measures could attract retaliation from China, further souring ties between the world’s two biggest economies. 

Other currencies with trade exposure to China fell tracking this notion. The Australian dollar’s pair fell 0.2%, while the Singapore dollar’s and the South Korean won’s pairs lost 0.1% and 0.3%, respectively. 

Japanese yen remains fragile, USDJPY nears 156

Weakness in the Japanese yen persisted this week, as the pair recouped a bulk of its losses made after the government seemingly intervened in currency markets last week.

3rd party Ad. Not an offer or recommendation by Investing.com. See disclosure here or
remove ads
.

The USDJPY pair rose 0.2% to 155.73 yen, trading well above lows of 152 it had hit earlier in May. Traders now saw 160 yen as the new line in the sand for Japanese government intervention.

Household spending data for March, released earlier on Friday, showed some resilience- a trend that could potentially underpin Japanese inflation expectations. 

Dollar steadies, set for weekly gains ahead of inflation data 

The and rose slightly in Asian trade, recovering a measure of overnight losses. But the greenback was still trading up about 0.2% for the week.

The greenback fell on Thursday after data showed a bigger-than-expected increase in weekly , furthering expectations of a cooling U.S. labor market.

This reinforced some expectations that the Fed will begin cutting interest rates by September. 

But sticky inflation remained a key point of contention for the Fed, with a slew of officials warning as much this week.

Their comments put upcoming data, due next week, squarely in focus for more cues on interest rates.

Continue Reading

Trending

©2021-2024 Letizo All Rights Reserved