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Yen jumps; Aussie, kiwi firm ahead of rate decisions

Rae Wee (Reuters)
Singapore
Mon, February 17, 2025 Published on Feb. 17, 2025 Published on 2025-02-17T14:01:02+07:00

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Yen jumps; Aussie, kiwi firm ahead of rate decisions This photo illustration shows Japanese 10,000 yen banknotes in Tokyo on April 22, 2022. (AFP/Behrouz Mehri )

T

he yen rose on Monday in a boost from upbeat Japanese GDP data, while the Australian and New Zealand dollars held broadly steady ahead of policy decisions later in the week.

The dollar was on the back foot as traders assessed recent weaker-than-expected US economic data which have reignited bets for more Federal Reserve rate cuts this year.

The yen last stood 0.5 percent higher at 151.51 per dollar, surging after data on Monday showed Japan's economy grew faster than expected in the fourth quarter on improved business spending and a surprise increase in consumption. That cemented the case for more rate hikes from the Bank of Japan this year.

Traders are now pricing in roughly another 37 basis points worth of rate hikes by December.

"The key takeaway for us is that the nominal household consumption grew significantly faster than real consumption and their divergence remained wide, which may activate the BOJ's inflation fighting mode," said Krishna Bhimavarapu, APAC economist at State Street Global Advisors.

"At the very least, this data removes the fears of stalling consumption, and is positive for the BOJ to deliver another hike, which could now come sooner rather than later."

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In the broader market, the dollar was struggling to recoup its losses after a selloff on the back of Friday's weak US retail sales data and as investors cheered the delay in the implementation of Donald Trump's reciprocal tariffs.

Geopolitics also remained in focus with reports that talks aimed at ending the Russian-Ukraine conflict will begin in Saudi Arabia this week, though the participants are not entirely clear.

That kept the euro supported, with the common currency inching closer toward the $1.05 level and last at $1.0488, while sterling rose 0.03 percent to $1.2589.

The dollar index last stood at 106.74, after tumbling 1.2 percent last week.

"The dollar weakness [...] was a function of both ongoing optimism that maybe tariffs are not going to be as disruptive as originally thought - that of course, remains to be seen, the Ukraine story is still bubbling in the background there," said Rodrigo Catril, senior FX strategist at National Australia Bank.

"And then the data, of course, playing to the idea that maybe the US exceptionalism is running out of steam, so it's weighing on the US dollar."

Down Under, the Australian dollar rose to a two-month high against a weaker dollar and last bought $0.6367, ahead of a rate decision from the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) on Tuesday.

The RBA is expected to deliver a quarter-point cut, marking its first reduction in over four years as it joins other major central banks in their easing cycles.

The kiwi similarly scaled a two-month top before paring some of its gains to last trade at $0.5736, ahead of the Reserve Bank of New Zealand's policy decision on Wednesday, where markets have priced in a 50-basis point reduction.

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