Forex
Asia FX muted as dollar rises past bumper rate cut; yen down before BOJ
Investing.com– Most Asian currencies moved in a flat-to-low range on Thursday as the dollar firmed sharply after an outsized interest rate cut by the Federal Reserve was offset by less dovish signals on future rates.
The Japanese yen was among the worst performers for the day, retreating amid pressure from the dollar and as traders priced in no changes to interest rates by the Bank of Japan later this week.
Broader Asian currencies were muted tracking mixed signals from the Fed.
Dollar rises past 50 bps rate cut, Fed outlook less dovish
The and both rose about 0.4% in Asian trade, extending overnight gains.
Strength in the greenback came even as the Fed – the higher end of market expectations- to a range of 4.75% to 5%.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell said that risks between higher inflation and more labor market weakness were now evenly balanced, and that the central bank was likely to cut rates further amid growing confidence that inflation will fall.
But Powell also said that the bank had no intention of returning to an ultra-low rate regime as seen during the pandemic, and that the Fed’s neutral rate will now be much higher than seen in the past.
While traders were still pricing in at least 125 bps worth of cuts by end-2024, Powell’s comments spurred expectations that rates will be higher than initially expected in the medium and long term.
This notion pressured most Asian currencies.
Japanese yen weakens with BOJ on tap
The Japanese yen’s pair rose 0.6% to 143.12 yen and was among the worst performers in Asia.
The currency was pressured by strength in the dollar, while traders also positioned for no changes to local interest rates after a on Friday.
The central bank is widely expected to keep rates unchanged, but could still signal future rate hikes on an elevated outlook for inflation. Japanese is also due on Friday.
Broader Asian currencies were mostly mixed. The Australian dollar’s pair rose 0.4%, buoyed by a stronger-than-expected reading on the in August.
Strength in the labor market gives the Reserve Bank of Australia more headroom to keep rates high for longer, which it is more inclined to do amid signs of sticky inflation in the country.
The Chinese yuan’s pair reversed early gains to trade sideways, with focus squarely on a l decision by the People’s Bank on Friday. The central bank is expected to leave the LPR unchanged.
The South Korean won’s pair jumped 1% as local trade resumed after three days of holidays. The country’s shrank slightly in August.
The Indian rupee’s pair was flat, but moved further away from the 84 rupee level. The Singapore dollar’s pair was flat.
Forex
Dollar stable after payrolls gains; euro slips on weak data
Investing.com – The U.S. dollar stabilized Monday, holding onto the gains seen after Friday’s strong jobs report at the start of a week that includes the release of key inflation data as well as the minutes from the last Federal Reserve meeting.
At 04:00 ET (08:00 GMT), the Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six other currencies, traded marginally lower at 102.247. It rose 0.5% on Friday to a seven-week high, logging more than 2% gains for the week, its biggest in two years.
Payrolls boosts the dollar
The growth in US quashed fears of a U.S. economic slowdown, and furthered the notion that the Fed will not need to cut interest rates sharply to support the economy, boosting the dollar.
Traders were seen largely wiping out bets on another 50 basis point cut at the next Fed meeting, and were pricing in an over 90% chance of a 25 bps cut, CME Fedwatch showed.
Focus this week is on addresses by a slew of Fed officials, more inflation data, as well as the minutes of the Fed’s September meeting. The Fed had cut rates by 50 bps during the meeting and announced the start of an easing cycle, although it still said future rate cuts will be data-dependent.
“The blowout US jobs report on Friday prompted the kind of hawkish repricing in rate expectations we thought would have materialised over a few weeks,” said analysts at ING, in a note.
“Markets no longer have pretext to look through Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell’s pushback against 50bp cuts, and are now finally aligned with the Dot Plot projections: 25bp cuts in November and December.”
The safe-haven greenback has also received a boost from the turmoil in the Middle East, with Israel bombing Hezbollah targets in Lebanon and the Gaza Strip on Sunday ahead of Monday’s one-year anniversary of the Oct. 7 attacks that sparked its war.
Weak German data hits euro
In Europe, drifted 0.1% lower to 1.0965, with the euro weakening after slumped 5.8% on the month in August, another illustration of the economic difficulties the eurozone’s largest economy is struggling with.
for August are due later in the session, and should show how consumers are faring during these tricky times.
ECB chief economist Philip Lane as well as board members Piero Cipollone and Jose Luis Escriva are all scheduled to speak later Monday, and are likely to follow President Christine Lagarde in signalling a brisk pace of further easing.
slipped slightly to 1.3113, after suffering a 1.9% drop last week, its steepest fall since early 2023.
Bank of England Chief Economist Huw Pill said on Friday the central bank should move only gradually with cutting interest rates, a day after governor Andrew Bailey was quoted as saying the BoE might move more aggressively to lower borrowing costs.
Doubts over BoJ raising rates
fell 0.3% to 148.22, paring back earlier gains after the pair surged to its highest level since mid-August.
The yen was hit by growing doubts over the Bank of Japan’s ability to keep raising interest rates in the coming months, especially amid uncertainty over the upcoming Japanese general elections.
was largely unchanged at 7.0176, with Chinese markets still closed as the country celebrates Golden Week.
Forex
Japan’s top FX diplomat warns against speculative moves as yen falls
By Makiko Yamazaki and Takaya Yamaguchi
TOKYO (Reuters) -Japan’s top currency diplomat on Monday issued a warning against speculative moves on the foreign exchange market as the yen fell below 149 per dollar.
“We will monitor currency market moves including speculative trading with a sense of urgency,” Atsushi Mimura told reporters, reviving a verbal warning tactic that his predecessor, Masato Kanda, frequently used.
Mimura declined to comment on the specifics of the current market situation.
Separately, Katsunobu Kato, the nation’s newly appointed finance minister, said the government would monitor how rapid currency moves could potentially impact the economy and would take action if necessary.
“The government will consider what action should be taken while monitoring the impacts,” Kato said in an interview with a small group of reporters on Monday.
The yen depreciated to 149.10 versus the dollar in early trading on Monday, the weakest since Aug. 16, after a surprisingly strong U.S. jobs report for September led traders to cut bets that the Federal Reserve will make further large interest rate cuts.
Japan last conducted yen-buying intervention in late July to support its currency after it tumbled to a 38-year low below 161 per dollar.
The yen has also been under pressure since new Japanese premier Shigeru Ishiba stunned markets when he said the economy was not ready for further rate hikes, an apparent about-face from his previous support for the Bank of Japan’s unwinding decades of loose monetary policy.
In Monday’s interview, Kato said the government would leave specific policy steps to the Bank of Japan (BOJ), when asked whether the policy rate should be maintained at 0.25%.
“The government hopes that the BOJ will communicate with markets thoroughly and take appropriate policy to achieve its 2% inflation target in a stable and sustainable manner,” he said.
The BOJ in March delivered its first rate hike in 17 years, arguing the pace of price and wage increases showed Japan was finally shaking its entrenched deflationary mindset. The central bank unexpectedly increased rates again in July, triggering a shakeout in domestic markets.
Forex
Dollar close to 7-week high after strongest week since 2022
By Stefano Rebaudo
(Reuters) – The U.S. dollar was just off its highest level in seven weeks on Monday after a rally sparked by Friday’s strong U.S. jobs data and an escalation in the Middle East conflict.
The dollar’s gains followed a U.S. jobs report that showed the biggest jump in six months in September, a drop in the unemployment rate and solid wage rises, all pointing to a resilient economy and forcing markets to reduce pricing for Federal Reserve rate cuts.
Many factors that weighed on the greenback through the summer had reversed, analysts said, mentioning fading recession concerns and a price action suggesting the limits of pricing a dovish reaction function have been reached with this dataset.
“We cannot see a driver for rebuilding structural U.S. dollar short positions in the next couple of weeks,” said Francesco Pesole, a forex strategist at ING.
“Markets appear to have given up on another 50 bps cut, and inflation figures shouldn’t change that, and while the Middle East situation may not spiral further, the consensus seems to be that a material de-escalation isn’t likely for now,” he added.
The measure against major peers was up 0.05% at 102.60. It rose on Friday to a seven-week high at 102.69, logging more than 2% gains for the week, its biggest in two years. It was slightly above 100 early last week.
MUFG flagged that it is the second time the dollar index has fallen back towards support at the 100.00-level in recent years. On the last occasion in July 2023, the greenback index tested but failed to break below the 100.00-level before staging a strong rebound (+7.8%) in the following three months.
“The extent of fiscal stimulus in China, which would mostly help economies outside the U.S., will be one of the main factors affecting the dollar in the short term, along with macro data, which can impact the Fed policy path,” said Lefteris Farmakis, forex strategist at Barclays.
China is about to announce the details of its fiscal plan to boost the economy.
In the Middle East, Israel bombed Hezbollah targets in Lebanon and the Gaza Strip on Sunday ahead of the one-year anniversary of the Oct. 7 attacks that sparked its war. Israel’s defence minister also declared all options were open for retaliation against arch-enemy Iran.
The euro stood at $1.0970, down 0.06%.
“Effective fiscal measures in Italy and France would benefit the euro on the margin as they strengthen sovereign creditworthiness and therefore the credibility of the euro area project,” Barclays’ Farmakis argued.
The two countries, that the European Union put under a so-called excessive deficit procedure, are taking measures to reduce their budget deficits.
The yen fell marginally to hit 149.10 per dollar, its weakest level since Aug. 16, before paring losses to trade around 148.60. That came on top of a more than 4% decline last week, its biggest weekly percentage drop since early 2009.
The yen’s underperformance has also to do with last week’s comments from new prime minister, Shigeru Ishiba, which stoked expectations that rate hikes in Japan are further away.
hit a new 2-month high at 4.016%, in London trade.
However, Barclays reckoned they have room to rise by about 20 bps even after accounting for the worst case of downside economic scenarios, arguing that recent jobs data strengthened its conviction in a long and gradual Fed easing cycle.
BofA now forecasts the Fed will cut by 25 bps per meeting until March 2025, and then 25 bps per quarter until end-2025.
Markets expect the Federal Reserve to cut rates by just 25 bps in November, rather than 50 bps, following the jobs data. They now price in a 95% chance of a quarter point cut, up from 47% a week ago, and a 5% chance of no cut at all, according to CME’s FedWatch tool
Sterling fell 0.4% against the dollar.
It recorded its biggest daily fall last week since April after Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey’s remarks triggered a substantial unwinding of stretched pound net longs positioning which makes the British currency more vulnerable to shifts in sentiment.
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