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Yen shoots for best month in years as growth concerns bring US yields down

The Japanese yen headed toward its best month in almost three years as growth worries have driven US yields sharply lower and squeezed speculators out of crowded short yen positions

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Reuters Singapore/Tokyo

The Japanese yen headed toward its best month in almost three years on Friday as growth worries have driven U.S. yields sharply lower and squeezed speculators out of crowded short yen positions.

Waves of buying lifted the yen about 1% in the Asia session, extending Thursday's gains. It is up 2% for July and touched 132.76 per dollar, a six-week high.

The yen often tracks moves in Treasury yields, particularly the 10-year yield. A wide gap against anchored Japanese yields has made it attractive for Japanese investors to own U.S. bonds and for others to short the yen against the dollar.

 

But that gap has narrowed about 30 basis points in July, the sharpest move since March 2020, as signs of both U.S. growth and interest rate rises slowing rallied Treasuries.

On Thursday data showed the U.S. economy unexpectedly contracted last quarter and on Wednesday the Federal Reserve noted a slowing economy could slow interest rate hikes.

"The weak growth data makes people think that it will stop the Fed from raising rates too fast," said Masafumi Yamamoto, chief currency strategist at Mizuho Securities in Toyko.

"Some traders are reducing their positions betting on a weaker yen because of the reducing risk of rate hikes."

The yen is on course for its best month in six years against an ailing euro. While it is up this week, the euro is 2.6% lower on the dollar for July and faces its next test with eurozone growth data due at 0900 GMT.

The euro was last 0.2% higher at $1.0214, but it faces stiff resistance at $1.0278.

Economist forecasts for sluggish 0.2% quarterly growth against a backdrop of high inflation and soaring energy prices have been a dead weight on the common currency.

"Currency markets are one avenue for investors to position for a European recession," Schroders' fixed income portfolio manager Robbie Boukhoufane said in a note.

"The prospect for structural stagflation is high if gas rationing becomes a reality. The fear of this scenario has intensified the weakness in the euro over recent weeks."

The U.S. dollar was broadly a bit softer elsewhere on Friday, too, and the dollar index headed for a second straight weekly loss. It fell 0.2% to 105.810, its lowest since July 5.

The softness helped the Antipodeans to multi-week highs and a second straight week of gains. The Australian dollar hit a six-week high of $0.7018 and the New Zealand dollar a one-month high of $0.6320. [AUD/]

The Reserve Bank of Australia meets next week, but a slightly-less-scorching-than-expected inflation reading on Wednesday has tamed bets on a 75 basis point hike and traders are expecting a 50 bps lift in the cash rate.

Sterling was flat at a one-month high of $1.2203 on Friday at $1.2189 and up for the week and the month. [GBP/]

The Bank of England also meets next week, with a 50 bp hike expected.

Bitcoin is on track for its best monthly gain since last October amid signs the "crypto winter" that began with bitcoin's tumble in May, might be beginning to thaw.

Bitcoin was steady at $23,905 on Friday and is up about 20% for July so far.

(Reporting by Tom Westbrook in Singapore and Kevin Buckland in Tokyo; Editing by Richard Pullin and Kim Coghill)

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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First Published: Jul 29 2022 | 12:28 PM IST

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