While an overnight drop in the dollar- following weaker-than-expected U.S. gross domestic product data- offered some relief to Asian units, this was largely offset by persistent bets on higher-for-longer U.S. interest rates. The dollar also trimmed some of its losses in Asian trade.
The Japanese yen was an underperformer, with the USDJPY pair rising past 156 to new 34-year highs after comments from the Bank of Japan sparked doubts over just how much capacity the central bank had to raise interest rates further.
The BOJ left interest rates unchanged after a historic hike in March. The central bank also forecast higher inflation in the coming years.
But the BOJ also forecast weaker growth in the Japanese economy, raising doubts over just how much capacity it would have to keep raising interest rates. This presented a largely dovish outlook for the yen.
Softer-than-expected consumer price index inflation data from Tokyo– released earlier on Friday- further sparked doubts over a hawkish BOJ.
Still, losses in the yen were limited by continued fears of government intervention in currency markets. An upcoming press conference with BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda, at 02:30 ET (06:30 GMT) also presented the possibility of more hawkish signals.
Broader Asian currencies also weakened on Friday, amid persistent fears of higher-for-longer U.S. interest rates. The Chinese yuan’s USDCNY pair rose slightly and remained close to recent five-month highs.
South Korea’s USDKRW pair rose 0.4%, while the Singapore dollar’s USDSGD pair added 0.1%.
The Australian dollar’s AUDUSD pair was supported by strong producer price index inflation data, which, coupled with higher CPI reading earlier this week, sparked bets on higher-for-longer rates in the country.
The Indian rupee’s USDINR pair moved little, with traders growing wary of more volatility in Indian markets as the 2024 general elections began.
The dollar index and dollar index futures rose marginally in Asian trade, recovering some overnight losses.
GDP data showed growth in the U.S. economy cooled more than expected in the first quarter, amid sticky inflation and high rates.
But inflation remained uncomfortably high, with the GDP price index growing more than expected.
This put upcoming PCE price index data squarely in focus. The reading is the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge.
Despite Thursday’s weak GDP reading, traders were seen steadily pricing out expectations for any near-term rate cuts by the Fed. The CME Fedwatch tool now shows traders pricing in rate cuts only by September, or the fourth quarter.
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