Address

Precise Investors

Trading

Dollar up, yen hands back some gains after BOJ policy shift

BOJ

The Dollar Index edged higher to 103.612, rebounding after dropping nearly 1% on Tuesday

The U.S. dollar edged higher Wednesday and the Japanese yen handed back some of the previous session’s outsized gains as the foreign exchange market stabilized after the Bank of Japan’s surprising policy shift.

At 08:05 GMT, the Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six other currencies, edged higher to 103.612, rebounding after dropping nearly 1% on Tuesday, falling close to a six-month low.

USD/JPY rose 0.1% to 131.79, with the yen gaining over 3% in the prior session to a four-month high.

These moves had followed Tuesday’s decision of the Bank of Japan to unexpectedly widen the range within which it allows yields on the benchmark government bonds to fluctuate, a potential sign that the bank eventually intends to tighten policy amid rising inflation.

The BOJ’s role as an ultra-dovish outlier among global central banks had been a key driver of JPY weakness in 2022, and markets are now assessing whether (this) announcement is effectively a first step towards a broader policy normalization process in Japan, which would quite radically change the outlook for the yen in 2023, said analysts at ING, in a note.

Elsewhere, EUR/USD rose 0.1% to 1.0627, helped by data released earlier Wednesday showing German consumer sentiment is set to extend its recovery heading into the new year.

The GfK institute said its forward-looking consumer sentiment index rose to -37.8 heading into January from a slightly revised reading of -40.1 in December.

With the third rise in a row, the consumer climate is slowly working its way out of the trough. The light at the end of the tunnel is getting a little brighter, said GfK consumer expert Rolf Buerkl.

GBP/USD fell 0.1% to 1.2166, after U.K. public sector net borrowing soared in November, illustrating the difficult financial situation the U.K. government finds itself in.

Sterling is likely to struggle into 2023 with the Bank of England widely seen as closer to ending its tightening cycle than the Federal Reserve.

Leave a Reply