Showing posts with label Monetary Policy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Monetary Policy. Show all posts

Monday, September 18, 2023

Japan’s yen takes the spotlight in central bank week

SINGAPORE  – The U.S. dollar barely moved in Asian trades on Monday, even as sterling blipped higher and the yen dipped, as a Japanese holiday and a bunch of upcoming central bank meetings sucked the air out of markets.

The Bank of Japan’s policy meeting on Friday is the highlight of the week in Asia, after Governor Kazuo Ueda stoked speculation of an imminent move away from ultra-loose policy.

That’s made the BOJ somewhat of a standout in a week packed with central bank meetings, with the U.S. Federal Reserve seen doing a hawkish pause on Wednesday and Bank of England possibly raising rates one last time on Thursday.

The yen was flat versus the greenback between 147.63 and 147.88 per dollar, with markets in Japan closed for a national holiday. In the days since Ueda’s remarks about a early move from negative rates, it has dropped 1.3 percent and taken losses for 2023 to more than 11 percent.

Carol Kong, economist and currency strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia, said she expects the yen to be volatile leading up to the policy meeting and that investors may have potentially misinterpreted Ueda’s comments.

The recent spell of weakness in Japanese wages and possibility prices too could soften and push the BOJ farther from its inflation goal, the case for a BOJ policy tightening is still not very strong, Kong said.

“In terms of the direction of travel, dollar/yen can definitely track higher…particularly if Governor Ueda sounds dovish and dashes hopes of policy tightening at the upcoming meeting,” she said.

Wei-Liang Chang, FX and credit strategist at DBS Bank, said market participants expect the BOJ could give guidance on when its negative interest rate policy will be reversed and the path of rate hikes beyond that.

“Anticipation of new BOJ rate guidance could support the yen into the meeting date, with the FOMC meeting also contributing to volatility this week,” Chang said.

The dollar index was a tad lower at 105.23, with the euro up 0.12 percent at $1.0705. Sterling was last trading at $1.2395, up 0.1 percent on the day.

Stark divergences in economic growth and in yields will keep the dollar propped up mostly, investors expect, particularly against the euro. Sterling has slid nearly 6 percent against the dollar since mid-July, while the euro has dropped more than 5 percent as the UK labor market and economy and the euro zone economy slowed.

The European Central Bank raised interest rates to 4% last week but said this hike could be its last.

With Japan shut, cash Treasuries were untraded on Monday.

U.S. Treasury yields have been edging higher, with the two-year above the 5 percent threshold and up 25 bps this month, spurred by rising government spending and the anticipation of the Fed keeping rates high for longer faces to rein in inflation that’s still above target. Last week’s U.S. retail sales data played a part, reducing the odds of recession even further.

Futures are pricing in almost no chance that the Fed raises interest rates at the end of its two-day meeting next Wednesday.

The Bank of England is likely to hike interest rates for the 15th time and take benchmark borrowing costs to 5.5 percent, and markets are already looking for a pause in a massive tightening cycle that has policymakers worried about the cooling economy.

UK inflation figures for August are also due on Wednesday, just ahead of the meeting.

Meanwhile, oil prices are adding a layer of complication to central banks’ growth-inflation dilemmas. Oil is also on track for its biggest quarterly increase since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in the first quarter of 2022.

Brent crude futures are at 10-month highs above $93 a barrel, after having posted a third weekly gain on supply tightness spearheaded by Saudi Arabian production cuts and some optimism around Chinese demand.

-reuters



Tuesday, May 3, 2022

Australia hikes interest rates for first time since 2010

SYDNEY - Australia's central bank raised interest rates for the first time in more than a decade on Tuesday, a pre-election hike designed to curb soaring consumer prices.

The Reserve Bank of Australia raised the main lending rate by 25 basis points to 0.35 percent, the first increase since November 2010. 

Ending record-low rates, the bank cited inflation levels that had "picked up more quickly, and to a higher level, than was expected". 

The move thrusts the bank to the centre of a fierce political debate about the health of Australia's economy just weeks before the May 21 elections. 

The opposition Labor party has seized on the prospect of a rate rise as evidence of a weakening economy and the conservative government's economic maladministration.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison, who is trailing in the polls, has insisted inflation is a result of worldwide trends, including the war in Ukraine. 

The annual inflation rate is currently at 5.1 percent. 

Like consumers around the world, Australians have been hit by soaring prices for food and fuels. 

But house prices have been rising for years even as wages have stagnated. Sydney and Melbourne are among the world's most expensive cities in the world to live. 

The rate rise is expected to be the first of several, which could have serious implications for Australia's once-perennially growing economy.

Higher interest rates will spell higher borrowing costs for millions of already heavily indebted Australians, in a country where real estate market speculation at times appears to be a national pastime.

Interest rates of two percent would cost the average homeowner about US$362 a month, according to financial services website RateCity.com.au. 

"That's going to be a lot for many borrowers to swallow, particularly anyone already struggling to make the monthly budget add up," said RateCity's Sally Tindall.

Australia's vast resource wealth has for decades provided insulation from global financial headwinds and underpinned high standards of living.

The country is among the world's largest producers and exporters of iron ore, gas and coal. 

But there are growing concerns that the "lucky country's" run of good fortune may be coming to an end. 

In early 2020 the economy fell into recession for the first time in almost three decades, largely because of devastating bushfires and the start of the Covid-19 pandemic. 

Climate-fuelled floods, bushfires and droughts are proving increasingly costly.

This year's east coast floods cost an estimated Aus$3.35 billion (US$2.4 billion) in insured losses, making it the costliest flood in Australia's history, according to the Insurance Council of Australia.

Agence France-Presse