Asian Stock Markets
The Japanese yen raced to its highest level in more than 16 months and
the Swiss franc surged on Friday as the growing threat of a trade war
prompted investors to take shelter in perceived low-yielding currencies.
In other currencies, sterling GBP=D3 was relatively stable in the backdrop of an EU summit with the British currency changing hands at $1.4107.
With short positions in the yen at near record highs,
according to weekly positioning data, thanks to years of using the
Japanese yen as a funding currency to buy high yielders, markets braced
for some unwinding of those bets.
The
dollar fell to as low as 104.635 yen on Friday, the greenback's lowest
level since November 2016. The dollar was last down 0.5 percent at
104.80 yen JPY=EBS.
The broad rise in the yen came as financial markets were rattled by worries over rising U.S.-China trade tensions.
U.S. President Donald Trump signed a presidential memorandum
on Thursday that will target up to $60 billion of Chinese products with
tariffs, but only after a 30-day consultation period that starts once a
list of goods is published.
The broad rise in the yen came as financial markets were rattled by worries over rising U.S.-China trade tensions.
A
gauge of stress in the U.S. money markets climbed to its highest level
in nearly nine years on Tuesday on concerns about growing costs for
banks and other companies to borrow dollars and further interest rate
increases from the Federal Reserve.
The gap between the
three-month dollar London interbank offered rate USD3MFSR= and
three-month overnight indexed swap rate USD3MOIS= expanded to 58 basis
points, the widest since May 2009, according to Thomson Reuters data.
In
a week that the U.S. Federal Reserve broadly stuck to its “dot plot” on
future interest rate moves and signaled a relatively upbeat outlook for
the economy, 10-year U.S. Treasury yields are on track to post its
second biggest drop so far this year, further weighing on the greenback.
Against a basket of its rivals, the
dollar .DXY was on track to fall 0.2 percent, taking its weekly losses
to about 0.6 percent, its biggest drop in a month.
The Swiss franc CHF= was also the other notable winner in currency markets this week with a 0.6 percent rise.
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