Regional currencies saw some relief as the U.S. dollar steadied after racing to near three-month highs this week. The dollar was buoyed chiefly by a string of hotter-than-expected U.S. economic readings, as well as comments from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, who said that rates will remain steady in the time being.
The Australian dollar was the best performer among its Asian peers, rising 0.6% from an over 1-½ month low after the Reserve Bank of Australia kept interest rates steady, and warned of more rate hikes if inflation remained sticky.
The RBA’s warning caught some traders off-guard, especially as recent declines in Australian inflation spurred bets that the RBA could signal interest rate cuts this year. But the bank gave no such indication on Tuesday.
Other data pointed to more cooling in the Australian economy. While retail sales grew 0.3% quarter-on-quarter in the December quarter, they still shrank 1% from last year.
Broader Asian currencies rose slightly. The Japanese yen added 0.1% after sinking to an over one-month low, while the Singapore dollar rose 0.1%.
The Chinese yuan was flat, but was once again close to breaking below the 7.2 level against the dollar- its weakest level in 1-½ months. A string of weak purchasing managers index readings over the past week dented the currency, and also set a dour tone for upcoming inflation data for January.
The inflation data is also due before the week-long Lunar New Year holiday, which begins this Friday.
The Indian rupee tread water around the 83 level, with focus turning to a Reserve Bank of India meeting this Thursday. The RBI is widely expected to keep rates steady, while its forecasts for inflation and economic growth will be closely watched.
The rupee had now largely reversed a mild boost from the Indian government unveiling a relatively conservative budget for the coming financial year, which was intended to help ease India’s massive fiscal deficit.
The South Korean won jumped 0.5%, but remained in sight of a nearly two-month low.
Most Asian currencies were nursing steep losses over the past two sessions, as markets began steadily pricing out the chances of early interest rate cuts by the Fed. Higher-for-longer rates diminish the appeal of risk-driven, high-yielding assets, and also limit foreign capital flows into regional markets.
Powell’s comments on late-Sunday reiterated the Fed’s earlier messaging that resilience in the economy gives the bank more headroom to keep monetary policy restrictive. This saw traders largely unwind bets that the Fed will begin trimming rates in March or May.
The CME Fedwatch tool showed an 83% chance the Fed will keep rates steady in March, and a 35% chance the Fed will keep rates steady in May, up substantially from a 9.9% chance seen last week.
To read the full article, Click Here