Asian Stock Markets
The dollar extended its losses against the yen and hit a fresh 15-month
low on Thursday, with market participants bracing for further near-term
weakness in the U.S. currency.
The dollar dropped below Wednesday’s nadir of 106.725 yen and fell as low as 106.42 yen, its weakest level since November 2016. That marked a drop of 3.7 percent from its early February peak near 110.50 yen.
The dollar dropped below Wednesday’s nadir of 106.725 yen and fell as low as 106.42 yen, its weakest level since November 2016. That marked a drop of 3.7 percent from its early February peak near 110.50 yen.
The U.S. currency later pared some of its losses and was last down 0.3 percent at 106.67 yen.
”There’s
nothing specific, it’s just a continuation of dollar selling that we’ve
seen everywhere overnight, said Tareck Horchani, head of sales trading
in Asia Pacific for Saxo Markets in Singapore.
Traders and analysts said the next support level for the dollar was around 105 yen.
Some
market participants said speculative buying of the yen initially helped
drag the dollar lower, with stop-loss dollar selling later adding to
the fall against the Japanese currency.
On
Wednesday, the dollar gained a lift after a stronger-than-expected rise
in U.S. consumer prices in January bolstered bets that the Federal
Reserve might raise interest rates four times in 2018.
But
that gain for the dollar proved short-lived, and the greenback ended up
retreating broadly against major peers despite the change in
expectations for U.S. interest rates.
In Thursday’s
Asian trade, the euro edged up 0.1 percent to $1.2459, after gaining 0.8
percent on Wednesday.
Sterling was steady at $1.4004, after also having
risen 0.8 percent the previous day.
In the wake of the
dollar’s sharp drop against the yen over the past couple of weeks,
there was increased focus on whether Japanese exporters and Japanese
investors would step up moves to hedge their exposure to the U.S.
currency.
Japanese Finance Minister Taro Aso
said on Thursday that he doesn’t see current yen moves as being so
strong or weak that would warrant intervention, adding that there was no
plan now to respond to FX moves.

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