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Yen jumps, dollar steady ahead of U.S. inflation data By Reuters

ByReuters

Jan 12, 2023
Dollar Edges Higher Ahead of CPI Data; Sterling Weakens

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© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A U.S. hundred dollar bill and Japanese 10,000 yen notes are seen in this photo illustration in Tokyo, February 28, 2013. REUTERS/Shohei Miyano

By Rae Wee and Samuel Indyk

LONDON (Reuters) – The yen got a boost on Thursday on expectations that the Bank of Japan will review the side effects of its monetary easing, while the dollar held near a seven-month low against the euro ahead of U.S. inflation data later in the day.

The Japanese yen rose as much as 0.8% to a session high of 131.36 per dollar in Asian trade, following a Yomiuri report that the BOJ will review the side effects of its monetary easing at next week’s policy meeting and may take additional steps to correct distortions in the yield curve. The yen last bought 131.70 per dollar.

The news follows the BOJ’s surprise tweak in December to its bond yield control, though the move has failed to address distortions caused in the bond market by the central bank’s massive bond buying.

“The report overnight emphasises that next week’s Bank of Japan is live for a potential policy change,” said Chris Turner, global head of markets at ING in London.

“You could start to see the normalisation of monetary policy which would be a huge step for Japan (and) a very positive tailwind for the yen,” Turner added.

Elsewhere, the dollar was a touch higher ahead of the closely watched U.S. inflation data, which could provide more clarity on how quickly price pressures are easing in the world’s largest economy and the impact on the Federal Reserve’s rate-hike path.

The was up 0.1% to 103.25, not far off its seven-month low of 102.93 hit earlier in the week.

Expectations that the Fed may be nearing the end of its aggressive monetary policy tightening campaign and that it may not have to raise rates as high as previously feared has already sent the greenback tumbling to multi-month lows against its peers this year.

“There’s a coherent message of an easing of price pressures in the United States, so even if you get one upside surprise to CPI that wouldn’t completely undermine the trend,” ING’s Turner said.

“Last Friday’s sub-50 ISM services data adds to recessionary fears and that supports the soft dollar backdrop where the Fed would be allowed to ease policy later in the year,” Turner added, with ING forecasting a further 50 basis points of rate hikes this year before 100 basis points of cuts in the second half.

Sterling slipped 0.1% to $1.2140, while the euro was 0.1% lower at $1.0747, after rising to a seven-month peak of $1.07765 in the previous session.

The euro continues to find support from hawkish messaging from European Central Bank officials, with four calling for additional rate increases on Wednesday.

“Our expectations are for another 125 basis points of rate hikes from the ECB and stay there until 2024,” ING’s Turner said.

“Our core views for Fed policy versus ECB policy would be for a stronger euro-dollar through the year.”

The slipped 0.2% to $0.6893, while the fell 0.3% to $0.6344.

Data released on Thursday showed that Australia’s trade surplus unexpectedly widened in November and came in well above forecasts.

China’s last stood at 6.7589 per dollar, after hitting a five-month high of 6.7545 per dollar earlier in the session, on optimism that China’s economy is on the road to recovery.

Meanwhile, bitcoin was higher for the fifth consecutive day, hitting its highest level in a month at $18,370.

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