Forex
Asia FX muted, dollar nurses weekly losses ahead of nonfarm payrolls
© Reuters.
Investing.com– Most Asian currencies kept to a tight range on Friday, while the dollar was headed for a negative week ahead of key U.S. nonfarm payrolls data, which is expected to provide more cues on the path of U.S. interest rates.
The data comes just a few days after the Federal Reserve kept interest rates steady and shot down expectations for an interest rate cut in March. But Fed Chair Jerome Powell struck a somewhat optimistic note on the U.S. economy, which drove investors into risk-driven assets despite the prospect of higher-for-longer interest rates.
This saw traders sell off the dollar after a short-lived bounce. The and were flat in Asian trade on Friday, and were set to lose about 0.4% this week.
This trade aided most Asian currencies, with the – which is a key indicator of risk appetite towards Asian markets- rising 0.4%. The Aussie recovered from an over one-month low ahead of a next week, where the central bank is widely expected to keep interest rates steady.
and inflation readings released this week showed that while Australian inflation was easing, it still remained well above the RBA’s target range.
Losses in the dollar offered some relief to Asian currencies after a bruising start to 2024, with most regional units logging steep losses in January.
The was flat after largely lagging its regional peers in January. But the yen found some resilience in recent sessions amid growing conviction that the Bank of Japan was close to moving away from its ultra-dovish policies this year.
The rose 0.2% as data showed grew slightly less than expected in January, while the traded sideways.
The was among the better performers this week, recovering sharply from near record lows after the ruling BJP party unveiled a surprisingly conservative annual budget, which bodes well for India’s bloated fiscal deficit.
The was flat following a stronger-than-expected midpoint fix from the People’s Bank of China. Losses in the yuan were held back by reported intervention in currency markets by the PBOC, after a series of underwhelming purchasing managers index readings for January.
The readings indicated that an economic recovery in China showed little signs of improving in the first month of 2024.
Markets look to May rate cut as nonfarm payrolls approach
After the Fed largely downplayed bets on a March interest rate cut, traders began pricing in a 25 basis point cut in May.
The showed traders pricing in an over 60% chance for a May rate cut, with analysts also expecting the Fed to cut interest rates at least four more times after May.
While such a scenario bodes well for risk-driven Asian currencies, the Fed has given no indication that it will trim rates by a wide margin in 2024. The central bank reiterated that its plans to cut rates will be largely dictated by the path of inflation, which has so far remained sticky.
data is expected to provide more cues on the labor market. The Fed has also cited a cooling labor market as one of the major factors to drive interest rate cuts.
Forex
Major Russian lenders say yuan coffers empty, urge central bank action
By Elena Fabrichnaya
MOSCOW (Reuters) – Major Russian banks have called on the central bank to take action to counter a yuan liquidity deficit, which has led to the rouble tumbling to its lowest level since April against the Chinese currency and driven yuan swap rates into triple digits.
The rouble fell by almost 5% against the yuan on Sept. 4 on the Moscow Stock Exchange (MOEX) after the finance ministry’s plans for forex interventions implied that the central bank’s daily yuan sales would plunge in the coming month to the equivalent of $200 million.
The central bank had been selling $7.3 billion worth of yuan per day during the past month. The plunge coincided with oil giant Rosneft’s 15 billion yuan bond placement, which also sapped liquidity from the market.
“We cannot lend in yuan because we have nothing to cover our foreign currency positions with,” said Sberbank CEO German Gref, stressing that the central bank needed to participate more actively in the market.
The yuan has become the most traded foreign currency on MOEX after Western sanctions halted exchange trade in dollars and euros, with many banks developing yuan-denominated products for their clients.
Yuan liquidity is mainly provided by the central bank through daily sales and one-day yuan swaps, as well as through currency sales by exporting companies.
Chinese banks in Russia, meanwhile, are avoiding currency trading for fear of secondary Western sanctions.
At the start of September, banks raised a record 35 billion yuan from the central bank through its one-day swaps.
“I think the central bank can do something. They hopefully understand the need to increase the liquidity offer through swaps,” said Andrei Kostin, CEO of second-largest lender VTB, stressing that exporters should sell more yuan as well.
The acute yuan shortage also follows months of delays in payments for trade with Russia by Chinese banks, which have grown wary of dealing with Russia after U.S. threats of secondary Western sanctions. These problems culminated in August in billions of yuan being stuck in limbo.
Russia and China have been discussing a joint system for bilateral payments, but no breakthrough is in sight. VTB’s Kostin said that since Russia’s trade with China was balanced, establishing a clearing mechanism for payments in national currencies should not be a problem.
Forex
Bank of America sees more downside for the dollar
Investing,com – The US dollar has stabilized after a sharp fall in August, but Bank of America Securities sees more troubles ahead for the US currency.
At 07:20 ET (11:20 GMT), the Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six other currencies, traded 0.2% lower to 101.077, having largely held its course over the last week.
That said, the US currency is still down 1.6% over the month.
The dollar’s selloff last month stood out in a historical context, according to analysts at Bank of America Securities, in a note dated Sept. 5.
The greenback has since stabilized, however, despite the outsized weakness, the US bank still sees three reasons to stay bearish on the Dollar Index (DXY).
Following similar episodes of bearish DXY breakouts, the index has tended to continue its downtrend, the bank said.
In the last 3 analogs, DXY index fell on average for another 4% before reaching a bottom. Extending this analysis to bilateral USD/G10 pairs suggests a continuation of the USD downtrend is more likely vs EUR, GBP, and AUD than SEK, NOK, and CHF in G10.
While the DXY made a new year-to-date low in August, broad nominal and real USD trade-weighted indices have stayed at Q4 2022 levels and would suggest the USD remains overvalued.
The USD selloff in 2024 has been concentrated in and other European currencies, leading to DXY divergence from other USD indices.
The bank also noted US 10y Treasury yield’s tendency to fall after the first Federal Reserve cut, while global financial conditions are set to loosen further.
“USD may see more weakness as other central banks, particularly the ones that cut policy rates ahead of the Fed, can now afford to let the Fed do some of their work and indirectly support global economies outside of the US,” BoA added.
Forex
Dollar’s demise appears overstated – JPMorgan
Investing.com – The US dollar has had a difficult summer, dropping substantially during the month of August, but JPMorgan thinks those predicting the demise of the U.S. currency are getting ahead of themselves.
At 06:00 ET (10:00 GMT), the Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six other currencies, traded 0.2% lower to 101.127, having lost 1.6% over the course of the last month.
“Diversification away from the dollar is a growing trend,” said analysts at JPMorgan, in a note dated Sept. 4, “but we find that the factors that support dollar dominance remain well-entrenched and structural in nature.”
The dollar’s role in global finance and its economic and financial stability implications are supported by deep and liquid capital markets, rule of law and predictable legal systems, commitment to a free-floating regime, and smooth functioning of the financial system for USD liquidity and institutional transparency, the bank added.
Additionally, the genuine confidence of the private sector in the dollar as a store of value seems uncontested, and the dollar remains the most widely used currency across a variety of metrics.
That said, “we are witnessing greater diversification and important shifts in cross-border transactions as a result of sanctions against Russia, China’s efforts to bolster usage of the RMB, and geoeconomic fragmentation,” JPMorgan said.
The more important and underappreciated risk, the bank added, is the increased focus on payments autonomy and the desire to develop alternative financial systems and payments mechanisms that do not rely on the US dollar.
“De-dollarization risks appear exaggerated, but cross-border flows are dramatically transforming within trading blocs and commodity markets, along with a rise in alternative financial architecture for global payments,” JPMorgan said.
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