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CORRECTED-FOREX-Dollar turns lower, yen strengthens ahead of Trump inauguration

ReutersJan 17, 2025 12:58 AM

Corrects the size of a possible BOJ rate increase in paragraph 2 to 25 basis points, not 50 basis points

Dollar weakened as markets prepare for Trump inauguration

Traders saw Bessent's performance as expected

Yen firms vs dollar on possible BOJ rate hikes

By Laura Matthews

- The U.S. dollar weakened against the yen on Thursday, as softer-than-expected U.S. economic data and growing confidence for a Bank of Japan interest-rate hike sent it tumbling to a near one-month low against the Japanese currency.

Recent remarks from BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda and his deputy Ryozo Himino have made clear that a hike will at least be discussed at next week's policy meeting. Markets see about a 79% chance of a 25-basis-point increase. 0#JPYIRPR

Japan's annual wholesale inflation held steady at 3.8% in December on stubbornly high food costs, data showed on Thursday.

The greenback was down 0.81% against the yen JPY=EBS at 155.2, its lowest since Dec. 19.

"We anticipated that there would be a nuanced U.S. dollar behavior, that [it] would likely be stronger relative to a number of currencies, but would be weaker relative to the Japanese yen," said Kristina Hooper, chief global market strategist, at Invesco U.S. "I think the general direction for JPY and the general direction for the dollar suggests that we will have a stronger yen to dollar."

The dollar was weaker against the euro EUR=EBS, which rose 0.1% to $1.03, as traders digested a slew of mixed economic news to gauge the outlook for the Federal Reserve's rate cuts this year.

U.S. retail sales rose 0.4% last month after upward revisions the previous month, data from the Commerce Department's Census Bureau showed.

Meanwhile, the number of Americans filing new applications for unemployment benefits increased more than expected last week, but remained at levels showing a healthy labor market.

The Philadelphia Fed Business Index, which jumped to 44.3 in January, was the lone surprise as the forecast was for a reading of minus 5.

That left U.S. dollar index - a measure of the value of the greenback relative to a basket of foreign currencies - down 0.05% at 108.97.

Amo Sahota, director at Klarity FX in San Francisco, said Wednesday's softer consumer prices data continues to drive the markets' tone, driving expectations that the Fed would still be pushing towards two rate cuts this year.

But the sign of disinflation is happening when inflation could re-escalate, depending on the incoming administration's trade policy.

"The markets are generally in a slightly more upbeat mood, but in a holding pattern here until we get through Monday," said Sahota.

That's when Donald Trump returns to the White House with some policies analysts expect will boost growth as well as increase price pressure.

Another focus for markets on Thursday, was the nomination hearing of Trump's choice of Scott Bessent to head the Treasury Department.

Bessent is expected to keep a leash on U.S. deficits and to use tariffs as a negotiating tool, mitigating the expected inflationary impact of economic policies expected from the Trump administration.

"So far, he hasn't really said anything too far away from what we're kind of expecting," Sahota said. "This is a government ... which needs to resolve itself on spending. So, we're looking at government spending to come down. They really want to implement back in the tax cuts, we've seen that headline come through."

Traders who have been growing more worried about inflation responded with relief to Wednesday's U.S. data, buying stocks and sending benchmark 10-year Treasury yields US10YT=RR down more than 13 basis points.

Treasury yields slipped on Thursday, after Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller said three or four interest cuts this year were still possible if U.S. economic data weakened further.

Sterling GBP=D3 was down 0.13% at $1.2228 against the dollar, having also earlier dropped sharply against the yen on Thursday as investors focused on monetary policy divergence after last week's selloff in gilts and the pound.

China's yuan, seen on the front lines of tariff risk, was pinned near the weak end of its trading band at 7.3316. CNY/

Currency bid prices at 16 January​ 08:54 p.m. GMT

Description

RIC

Last

U.S. Close Previous Session

Pct Change

YTD Pct

High Bid

Low Bid

Dollar index

=USD

108.96

109.03

-0.05%

0.43%

109.4

108.82

Euro/Dollar

EUR=EBS

1.0299

1.029

0.1%

-0.51%

$1.0315

$1.026

Dollar/Yen

JPY=D3

155.19

156.505

-0.83%

-1.36%

156.42

155.135

Euro/Yen

EURJPY=

159.84​

160.97

-0.7%

-2.07%

161.08

159.77

Dollar/Swiss

CHF=EBS

0.9111

0.9129

-0.18%

0.41%

0.9142

0.91

Sterling/Dollar

GBP=D3

1.223

1.2245

-0.09%

-2.19%

$1.226

$1.2173​

Dollar/Canadian

CAD=D3

1.4393

1.4339

0.39%

0.1%

1.4403

1.4324

Aussie/Dollar

AUD=D3

0.621

0.6227

-0.24%

0.39%

$0.6248

$0.6192

Euro/Swiss

EURCHF=

0.9382

0.9389

-0.07%

-0.12%

0.9394

0.9371

Euro/Sterling

EURGBP=

0.8418

0.8402

0.19%

1.75%

0.8438

0.8407

NZ Dollar/Dollar

NZD=D3

0.5606

0.5616

-0.11%

0.25%

$0.5633

0.5582

Dollar/Norway

NOK=

11.3595​

11.3256

0.3%

-0.05%

11.4002

11.3108

Euro/Norway

EURNOK=

11.701

11.6542

0.4%

-0.58%

11.714

11.648

Dollar/Sweden

SEK=

11.1507

11.1536

-0.03%

1.21%

11.1937

11.1288

Euro/Sweden

EURSEK=

11.485

11.4806

0.04%

0.16%

11.499

11.475

(Reporting by Laura Matthews; Additional reporting by Stefano Rebaudo in Milan; Editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise, Alison Williams and Alistair Bell)

((Laura.Matthews@thomsonreuters.com;
stefano.rebaudo@tr.com))

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