Yen weakens

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TOKYO- The yen continued to drift lower against the dollar on Tuesday as gaping interest rate differentials weighed on the currency, despite fresh warnings from Japanese officials following two rounds of suspected dollar-selling intervention last week.

The Australian dollar eased back from near a two-month high versus its US counterpart after the Reserve Bank of Australia kept rates steady as widely expected, and refrained from ramping up hawkish signals in its policy statement.

The Aussie slipped 0.36 percent to $0.6601, backing away from Friday’s high of $0.6650, a level previously seen on March 8.

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“It was a bit of ‘Buy the rumor and sell the fact,’” said James Kniveton, senior corporate FX dealer at Convera.

“Markets were prepared for a bit of hawkishness but the statement was a bit bland.”

The US dollar gained 0.44 percent to 154.5635 yen adding to its 0.58 percent rally from Monday.

On Friday, it sank as low as 151.86 yen for the first time since April 10, as softer-than-expected monthly US jobs data fed losses following Bank of Japan data that suggested official intervention could have amounted to some 9 trillion yen ($58.37 billion).

Japan’s finance ministry has refrained from commenting on whether it was behind the dollar selling, but top currency diplomat Masato Kanda repeated on Tuesday that the government “will continue to take the same firm approach” to disorderly yen moves.

He also acknowledged that an orderly market would not require the government to step in, however, which some analysts took as a signal that intervention risks had lessened.

The carry trade remains a draw, with a Federal Reserve rate cut likely to take some time and the BOJ following a cautious approach to tightening after its first rate hike since 2007 in March, leaving a vast gap of 370 basis points between ultra-low Japanese long-term yields and their US counterparts.

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