SINGAPORE- The yen was pinned near a three-month low against the dollar on Tuesday as sticky US inflation bolstered the case for higher-for-longer interest rates, contrasting with a recession in Japan and market doubts about a near-term exit from its easy policy.
In Asia, China’s loan prime rate (LPR) decision takes center stage, where it is widely expected to trim its benchmark mortgage reference rate to shore up the country’s faltering economic growth.
Ahead of the outcome, the offshore yuan edged marginally lower to 7.2143 per dollar.
The greenback last bought 150.25 yen having already surpassed the psychological 150 per dollar level for six straight sessions and prompting warnings from Japanese officials in a bid to stabilize the currency.
Higher-than-expected US producer prices and consumer prices data last week further scaled back market expectations of how soon, and by how much, the Federal Reserve could ease interest rates this year, with futures pointing to just about 90 basis points worth of cuts in 2024, down from about 160 bps at the end of last year.
On the other hand, Japan’s economy, which unexpectedly slipped into a recession in the final quarter of last year on sluggish consumption and capital expenditure, has prompted investors to rethink the chances of a near-term exit by the Bank of Japan (BOJ) from its ultra-loose monetary policy.
“At the moment, the data coming in from Japan is telling us that it’s not as rosy as what the BOJ would like to see in order to begin moving away from negative interest rates,” said Rodrigo Catril, senior currency strategist at National Australia Bank (NAB).