Yen Falls Amid Risk Appetite
23 January 2025 - 2:20PM
RTTF2
The Japanese yen weakened against other major currencies in the
Asian session on Thursday amid risk appetite among traders, driven
by China after multiple Chinese government departments rolled out
medium- and long-term investment plan with clear measures to boost
capital market confidence. Concerns about tariff threats by U.S.
President Donald Trump limited market's upside.
China has announced a plan to direct hundreds of billions of
yuan in new capital from state-owned insurance companies into
stocks each year to boost investor confidence and revive its stock
market. Meanwhile, traders also expect the Bank of Japan will raise
interest rates at the end of a two-day policy meeting on
Friday.
Later in the day, traders look forward to the U.S. President
Donald Trump's remarks as a new catalyst.
In economic news, data from the Ministry of Finance showed that
Japan posted a seasonally adjusted merchandise trade surplus of
130.936 billion yen in December. That beat expectations for a
deficit of 55.0 billion yen following the 110.3 billion yen
shortfall in November.
Exports climbed 2.8 percent on year to 9.910 trillion yen -
exceeding expectations for an increase of 2.3 percent after rising
3.8 percent in the previous month. Imports gained an annual 1.8
percent to 9.779 trillion yen versus forecasts for an increase of
2.6 percent following the 3.8 percent decline a month earlier.
In the Asian trading today, the yen fell to 8-day lows of 156.75
against the U.S. dollar and 172.92 against the Swiss franc, from
yesterday's closing quotes of 156.44 and 172.59, respectively. If
the yen extends its downtrend, it is likely to find support around
159.00 against the greenback and 176.00 against the franc.
Against the euro and the pound, the yen slid to 163.13 and
193.01 from Wednesday's closing quotes of 162.82 and 192.63,
respectively. The next possible downside target for the yen is seen
around 165.00 against the euro and 198.00 against the pound
The yen dropped to a 2-week low of 88.83 against the NZ dollar,
from yesterday's closing value of 88.57. On the downside, 90.00 is
seen as the next support levels for the yen.
Against the Australia and the New Zealand dollars, the yen edged
down to 98.32 and 108.91 from Wednesday's closing quotes of 98.12
and 108.68, respectively. The yen is likely to find support around
99.00 against the aussie and 110.00 against the loonie.
Looking ahead, the Confederation of British Industry releases
Industrial Trends survey results at 6:00 am ET in the European
session. The order book balance is forecast to improve to -35
percent in three months to January.
In the New York session, U.S. weekly jobless claims, Canada
retail sales data for November, U.S. KC Fed manufacturing index for
January and U.S. EIA crude oil data are slated for release.
At 10:00 am ET, the European Commission releases flash euro area
consumer confidence survey data. The sentiment index is seen rising
to -14.0 in January from -14.5 in December.
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