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Forex

Japan names new FX diplomat as yen hits 38-year low

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By Makiko Yamazaki and Satoshi Sugiyama

TOKYO (Reuters) -Japan appointed a new top foreign exchange diplomat on Friday as the yen plumbed a 38-year low against the dollar, heightening expectations of imminent market intervention by Tokyo to shore up the battered currency.

Atsushi Mimura, a financial regulation veteran, replaces Masato Kanda, who launched the biggest yen-buying intervention on record this year and aggressively jawboned speculators against pushing down the Japanese currency too much.

While the change is part of a regular personnel reshuffle conducted every year, it comes as markets test Japan’s resolve to arrest a renewed fall in the yen that adds pain to households and companies by pushing up import costs.

“Kanda appeared to be someone aggressive, given his comments that authorities were on stand-by to intervene any time of the day,” said Hideo Kumano, chief economist at Dai-ichi Life Research Institute, adding that his departure could affect how Japan communicates its currency policy.

“But it’s hard to say until we see how his successor steers policy. All in all, I don’t think the big policy direction would change much.”

Japanese officials reiterated their warnings as the yen slid past 161 per dollar on Friday, well below levels that triggered the last bout of intervention in end-April and early May.

“Excessive volatility in the currency market is undesirable,” Finance minister Shunichi Suzuki told a news conference on Friday, adding that authorities will “respond appropriately” to such moves.

He also said authorities were “deeply concerned” about the impact of the yen’s “rapid and one-sided” moves on the economy.

Japanese authorities are facing renewed pressure to stem sharp declines in the yen as traders focus on the interest rate divergence between Japan and the United States.

A weaker yen is a boon for Japanese exporters, but a headache for policymakers as it increases import costs, adds to inflationary pressures and squeezes households.

Under Kanda, who was FX diplomat for three years, Tokyo spent 9.8 trillion yen ($60.85 billion intervening in the foreign exchange market at the end of April and early May, after the Japanese currency hit a then 34-year low of 160.245 per dollar on April 29.

The yen hit 161.27 per dollar on Friday, its weakest since 1986, ahead of a crucial U.S. inflation data due later in the day that could heighten market volatility.

Market players see authorities’ next line-in-the-sand as lying somewhere around 164.50.

“If authorities want to prevent the yen from breaching that threshold, they will probably step in before the currency hits that level,” said Daisaku Ueno, chief FX strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ (NYSE:) Morgan Stanley Securities.

NEW DIPLOMAT

Mimura’s appointment will take effect on July 31 after the meeting of the Group of 20 finance ministers and central bank governors in Rio de Janeiro from July 25.

Little, however, is known about his stance on currency policy. Currently head of the ministry’s international bureau, the 57-year-old will become vice finance minister for international affairs – a post that oversees Japan’s currency policy and coordinates economic policy with other countries.

Having spent nearly a third of his 35-year government career at Japan’s banking regulator, Mimura has expertise and international ties in the area of financial regulation.

During his three-year stint at the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Mimura helped set up the Financial Stability Board in the midst of the 2008-2009 global financial crisis to reform financial regulation and supervision.

At the finance ministry, he worked on the revision to the law over the Japan Bank for International Cooperation last year to expand the scope of the state-owned bank and make foreign companies key to Japan’s supply chains eligible for loans from the bank.

© Reuters. A person walks past an electric screen displaying the current Japanese Yen exchange rate against the U.S. dollar and Japan's Nikkei share average as the yen declined to 38-year lows past 161 per dollar, outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan June 28, 2024. REUTERS/Issei Kato

Mimura was also part of a government team that briefed foreign investors on the 2020 revisions to foreign ownership rules to dispel the notion that tighter rules were meant to discourage foreign investment in Japan.

($1 = 161.0600 yen)

 

Forex

Dollar bounces after sharp loss; euro retreats on Lagarde comment

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Investing.com – The US dollar edged higher Monday, rebounding after the sharp losses at the end of last week on signs of cooling inflationary pressures, while the euro slipped following dovish comments from ECB head Christine Lagarde.

At 05:00 ET (10:00 GMT), the Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six other currencies, traded 0.4% higher to 107.750, after falling sharply from a two-year high on Friday.

Dollar bounces after sharp retreat

The dollar bounced Monday after falling sharply on Friday as the Federal Reserve’s preferred showed moderate monthly rises in prices, with a measure of underlying inflation posting its smallest gain in six months. 

That eased some concerns about how much the may cut in 2025, which had risen following the hawkish US rate outlook after the last Fed policy meeting of the year.

That said, traders are pricing in 38 basis points of rate cuts next year, shy of the two 25 bp rate cuts the Fed projected last week, with the market pushing the first easing of 2025 out to June, with a cut in March priced at around 53%.

Trading volumes are likely to thin out as the year-end approaches, with this trading week shortened by the festive period.

Eurozone “very close” to ECB inflation goal

In Europe, fell 0.1% to 1.0414, near a two-year low it touched in November, down 5.5% this year, after European Central Bank President said the eurozone was getting “very close” to reaching the central bank’s medium-term inflation goal.

“We’re getting very close to that stage when we can declare that we have sustainably brought inflation to our medium-term 2%,” Lagarde said in an interview published by the Financial Times on Monday.

Earlier in December, Lagarde had said the central bank would cut interest rates further if inflation continued to ease towards its 2% target, as curbing growth was no longer necessary.

The lowered its key rate last week for the fourth time this year, and is likely to cut interest rates further in 2025 if inflation worries fade.

traded largely flat at 1.2571, after data showed that Britain’s economy failed to grow in the third quarter, adding to the signs of an economic slowdown.

The Office for National Statistics lowered its estimate for the change in output to 0.0% in the July-to-September period from a previous estimate of 0.1% growth.

The ONS also cut its estimate for growth in the second quarter to 0.4% from a previous 0.5%.

policymakers voted 6-3 to keep interest rates on hold last week, a bigger split than expected, amid worries over a slowing economy.

Yuan hits one-year high

In Asia, rose 0.2% to 156.72, after rising as far as 158 last week following dovish signals from the .

The BOJ signaled that it was not considering interest rate hikes in the near-term despite a recent pick-up in inflation, and could raise rates by as late as March 2025.

edged 0.2% higher to 7.3080, hitting a one-year high as traders continued to fret over China’s economic outlook. While Beijing is expected to ramp up fiscal spending in the coming year to support the economy, looser monetary conditions are expected to undermine the yuan.

 

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Forex

Asia FX muted, dollar slips from 2-yr high on soft inflation data

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Investing.com– Most Asian currencies moved little on Monday, while the dollar steadied from a tumble from over two-year highs after soft U.S. inflation data spurred some hopes that interest rates will still fall in 2025. 

Asian currencies were nursing steep losses against the dollar from last week, although they trimmed some declines on Friday after the soft inflation data. The outlook for regional markets also remains clouded by uncertainty over U.S. interest rates and policy under incoming President Donald Trump. 

Dollar slips from 2-yr high as PCE data misses expectations 

The and both steadied on Monday after clocking sharp losses on Friday.

The greenback slid from an over two-year peak after data- the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge- read softer-than-expected on Friday. 

Still, the reading remained above the Fed’s 2% annual target, keeping uncertainty over interest rates in play.

The Fed had cut interest rates by 25 basis points last week, but flagged a slower pace of interest rate cuts in the coming year, citing concerns over sticky inflation and resilience in the labor market. 

The Fed is expected to cut rates twice in 2025, although the path of rates still remains uncertain.

Markets took some relief from the government avoiding a shutdown after lawmakers approved an eleventh-hour spending bill.

Asia FX pressured by rate uncertainty 

Despite clocking some gains on Friday, most Asian currencies were still trading lower for December, as the outlook for interest rates remained uncertain.

The Japanese yen’s pair rose 0.1% to around 156.59 yen, after rising as far as 158 yen last week following dovish signals from the Bank of Japan.

The BOJ signaled that it was not considering interest rate hikes in the near-term despite a recent pick-up in inflation, and could raise rates by as late as March 2025. 

The Chinese yuan’s pair rose 0.1%, hitting a one-year high as traders continued to fret over China’s economic outlook. While Beijing is expected to ramp up fiscal spending in the coming year to support the economy, looser monetary conditions are expected to undermine the yuan. 

The Singapore dollar’s pair was flat ahead of inflation data due later in the day, while the South Korea’s won’s pair rose 0.3%.

The Australian dollar’s pair rose slightly after sinking to a two-year low last week. 

The Indian rupee’s pair steadied after hitting a record high of over 85 rupees last week.

 

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Forex

Dollar to weaken less than expected next year: UBS

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Investing.com — The dollar recently notched fresh year-to-date highs against its rivals and is likely to remain strong after the Federal Reserve leaned more hawkish at its recent December meeting, analysts from UBS said in a recent note.

“While we still expect the dollar to fall, we now see less weakness in 2025 given these factors and adjust our forecasts slightly,” analysts from UBS said in a recent note.

The less bearish view on the USD comes in the wake of the greenback making fresh year-to-date highs in key exchange rates and the expectations for fewer U.S. rate cuts. 

“The USD has been driven lately by prospects of fewer Fed rate cuts and tariff risks,” the analysts said.

The euro has been particularly affected by dollar strength, but is expected to trade around $1.05 against the greenback in the first half of 2025, the analysts forecast. 

But a significant drop toward parity for the can’t be ruled out, “due to real tariff threats or further divergence in the macro backdrop between the US and Europe,” the analysts added.

Still, any move toward parity should be short-lived, the analysts said, amid expectations for the economic backdrop in Europe to improve in the second half of the year, narrowing the divergence between Europe and U.S. yields. 

“The trajectory back into the middle of the trading range or higher, 1.08 to 1.10, comes with the view that two-year yield differentials will still narrow to some degree and better macro data out of Europe provide some underlying support for EURUSD in 2H25,” the analysts said.

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