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Yen weakens past key level, sterling pares gains

Euro falls as ECB prepares for another rate hike

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SINGAPORE: The yen breached the key level of 145 a dollar (RM4.65) for the first time in more than a week since Japan’s interventi­on to prop up the currency, while sterling gave up some of its gains after a modest recovery at the endo flast week.

The yen bottomed at 145.4 to the dollar, and last traded down 0.1% at 144.9 yesterday, in thin Asian trade on a holiday in China, South Korea and some Australian states.

Yesterday’s fall came after Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki’s comments that Japan stood ready for “decisive” steps in the foreign exchange market if excessive yen moves persisted.

Sept 22 was the last time the currency had weakened below 145 to the dollar, after the Bank of Japan stuck with ultra-low interest rates, which prompted a record expenditur­e of 2.8 trillion yen (Us$19.7bil or Rm91.6bil) by authoritie­s to prop up the yen.

Elsewhere, sterling lost 0.69% to US$1.1088 (RM5.16), following a strong rebound at the end of last week when the Bank of England said it would buy as much government debt as needed to restore order after financial chaos unleashed by new Prime Minister Liz Truss’s plans to cut taxes.

The government was sticking with the policy, Truss reiterated on Sunday, adding that her cabinet had not been told in advance of the decision by finance minister Kwasi Kwarteng.

The Australian and New Zealand dollars gained ground in Asia ahead of expected rate hikes by their central banks during the week.

The Aussie dollar was up 0.25% to US$0.64270 (RM2.97), while the Kiwi was 0.41% higher at US$0.56265 (RM2.6).

The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) and the Reserve Bank of New Zealand meet today

and tomorrow, respective­ly, with markets expecting both to lift their cash rate by 50 basis points, though focus will also be on the tone of policymake­rs.

“The RBA could be quite influentia­l if they give a more nuanced approach and signal that they may come down to 25 basis points in the November meeting.

“That might be taken, globally, quite well,” said Chris Weston, head of research at Pepperston­e.

The euro fell 0.1% to US$0.9790 (RM4.55), as expectatio­ns for another jumbo European Central Bank (ECB) rate hike this month, following a red-hot inflation print, heightened worries that the economy would be tipped into a recession.

Data on Friday showed that eurozone inflation zoomed past forecasts to a record high of 10% in September, beating expectatio­ns of 9.7%.

“The ECB is still going to have to go hard ... for me, Europe and the United Kingdom, it’s less about relative interest rate dynamics, and more about growth dynamics,” said Weston.

“I think what we’re starting to try and do now is look at markets where we can price inflation or start feeling a bit more confident about the trajectory around inflation. I think the US falls into that category.”

US non-farm payrolls are due at the end of the week, while a flood of manufactur­ing purchasing managers index data out later yesterday will also give insight into the outlook for the global economy.

The US dollar index rose 0.06% to 112.30.

 ?? ?? Markets tumble: People look at an electronic stock board showing Shanghai, Japan’s Nikkei 225 and New York Dow indexes in Tokyo. Asian shares were mostly lower yesterday after Wall Street closed with a loss of 9.3%, the worst monthly decline since March 2020.
Markets tumble: People look at an electronic stock board showing Shanghai, Japan’s Nikkei 225 and New York Dow indexes in Tokyo. Asian shares were mostly lower yesterday after Wall Street closed with a loss of 9.3%, the worst monthly decline since March 2020.

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