Yen firms on policymaker meeting, dollar swings after debt deal
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Yen firms on policymaker meeting, dollar swings after debt deal
LONDON (Reuters) - Currency markets were choppy on Tuesday as the dollar hit a 10-week high against peers and a six-month top versus the yen before Japanese officials gave their currency a nudge, as investors kept a wary eye on global policymakers.
Japan will closely watch currency market moves and respond "appropriately" as needed, the country's top currency diplomat said on Tuesday after financial authorities met in response to a weakening in the yen to its softest in six months versus the dollar.
The yen strengthened on news of the meeting, and held onto those gains, with the dollar last down 0.2% at 140.16 yen having earlier risen as high as 140.93, its highest since November 2022.
Derek Halpenny, MUFG's head of research, global markets EMEA said he thought the meeting would not have a major impact, though he said the Japanese currency was coming into focus ahead of a possible election, as Japan is a major energy importer, and subsidies for petrol are nearing their end.
"Maybe it's the start of some potential increasing concerns (about the currency), obviously we've had the debt ceiling agreement, and Tokyo is maybe looking at the markets seeing a reasonable chance the Fed hikes in June and it's feasible we get dollar/ yen in mid 140s."
"If (Prime Minster) Kishida is looking at a snap election, he wants to be seen to be addressing one source of energy inflation which would be currency depreciation."
President Joe Biden and Republican House Speaker Kevin McCarthy on Sunday signed off on an agreement to temporarily suspend the U.S. debt ceiling and cap some federal spending to prevent a debt default.
That helped the dollar index, which measures the U.S. currency against six major peers, hit 104.53 in European trading its highest in 10 weeks, though then retreated to 104.02.
The deal is set to face its first test in Congress later on Tuesday.
"It seems to be win-win on almost any scenario for the dollar right now," said Jane Foley head of FX strategy at Rabobank.
"Last week the dollar was gaining on safe-haven demand in case the U.S. defaults, this week you can say the dollar is gaining because the U.S. isn't going to default. It tells you there is demand for the U.S. dollar."
She said attention was turning to whether the U.S. Federal Reserve will hike interest rates again, if not in June then possibly in July.
That, alongside a rethinking of market positioning - people had been dumping a lot of long dollar positioning since the end of last year - was supporting the dollar, she said.
The euro was last up 0.28% at $1.0733, having earlier hit a two-month low, while the pound rose 0.5% to $1.2426.
Elsewhere, China's onshore yuan eased too as soft as 7.0995 per dollar after China's central bank set the fixing at the yuan's weakest level since December. The offshore yuan also weakened past a key level of 7.1 per dollar.
The Turkish lira slipped further and weakened to a record low after President Tayyip Erdogan secured victory in the country's presidential election on Sunday.