Your current location is:{Current column} >>Text
Asia FX Muted as Hawkish Fedspeak Curbs Dollar Losses By Investing.com
{Current column}43People have watched
IntroductionUS Dollar Japanese Yen-0.20%US Dollar Indian Rupee-0.24%US Dollar Korean Won0.56%US Dollar Chinese Y ...

By Ambar Warrick
Investing.com-- Most Asian currencies moved little on Gade ranking forex dealersWednesday as hawkish comments from Federal Reserve officials helped stem recent losses in the dollar, while the Japanese yen hovered around 32-year lows as traders looked past threats of government intervention.
The yen fell as far as 149.29, its weakest level against the dollar since 1990, as a widening gap between local and U.S. interest rates weighed.
Short sellers of the currency largely ignored warnings from Japanese authorities that they would intervene a second time in currency markets to support the currency. Japanese intervention in September had only briefly stalled the yen’s losses, which was then trading around 145 to the dollar.
Other Asian currencies moved little. The Chinese yuan slipped 0.2%, while the Indian rupee hovered near record lows, at 82.3 to the dollar.
The South Korean won bucked the trend, rising 0.4% as traders bet the government would intervene in currency markets to fish the currency from 14-year lows.
The dollar index was largely flat on Wednesday, but appeared to have curbed recent losses after hawkish comments from two Federal Reserve officials. Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari said the central bank could push its benchmark rate to higher than 4.75% by mid-2023 if inflation remains stubbornly high. His comments came just a few days after data showed U.S. inflation saw little signs of slowing in September, sticking to near 40-year highs.
Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic also stated that the central bank’s key focus should lie in controlling runaway inflation.
Their comments helped curb a two-day losing streak in the dollar index. The index traded sideways around 112 on Wednesday, as did dollar index futures. U.S. Treasury yields also edged higher, sticking close to 14-year highs.
Rising U.S. interest rates were the biggest weight on Asian currencies this year, as the gap between risky and low-risk debt narrowed. The trend is expected to persist in the coming months, given that the Federal Reserve has made no indication that it plans to ease up on interest rate hikes.
Markets are pricing in a nearly 100% chance the central bank will raise rates by 75 basis points in November, its fourth such hike this year.
Tags:
Related articles
Inflation reading, consumer sentiment, Pinduoduo: 3 things to watch By
{Current column}-- Stocks wobbled on Thursday as Nvidia's (NASDAQ:) outlook lifted tech stocks despite worries that ...
Read moreOil headed for worst weekly drop since Feb on U.S. slowdown fears By Reuters
{Current column}By Sudarshan Varadhan and Muyu Xu(Reuters) -Oil fell for a fourth session on Friday, heading for its ...
Read moreDow futures rise 20 pts; Powell set to climb Capitol Hill again By
{Current column}By Peter Nurse -- U.S. stocks are seen opening with marginally higher Wednesday, rebounding after ...
Read more
Popular Articles
- 13F Insights: Buffett, Burry Buy Up Financials; Ackman Targets Discretionaries
- Silver Block Trading Is Safe? Company Abbreviation Silver Block
- Italy’s CDP bids for TIM’s grid to rival KKR approach By Reuters
- Binance says it has no exposure to Silvergate, but crypto still slides By
- Factory orders, job openings, Walmart meeting: 3 things to watch By
- Bairradaforex Trading Is Safe? Company Abbreviation Bairradaforex
Latest articles
-
U.S. arrests 21
-
Commodities Week Ahead: Oil Back in Inflation Grind as Powell, U.S. Jobs Beckon
-
Futures edge higher after Wall St selloff on Powell remarks By Reuters
-
Meta exploring plans for Twitter rival By Reuters
-
Elon Musk Acquires a Stake in Lovin Dubai for $100 Million: Report By CoinEdition
-
Altria to revive vaping push with $2.8 billion NJOY bid after Juul fiasco By Reuters