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Higher US interest rates: Yen's slide to multi-decade lows keeps markets on intervention alert

Interest rate differentials, prolonged monetary tightening in the US, a factor in recent forex moves

SINGAPORE (Reuters) – The battered yen was stuck near a three-decade low against the dollar on Tuesday, struggling to find a floor as the Bank of Japan's (BOJ) ultra-easy monetary policy settings remained at odds with the prospect of higher-for-longer rates elsewhere.

The Japanese currency similarly slumped to a 15-year low of 162.38 per euro in early Asia trade and slid to a roughly three-month trough of 186.25 per British pound.

Against the dollar, the yen last stood at 151.72, languishing near a one-year low of 151.92 hit on Monday. A break below last year's trough of 151.94 per dollar would mark a fresh 33-year low for the yen.

The yen had jumped briefly against the greenback in New York hours on Monday after striking the year-to-date low, which analysts attributed to a flurry of trading in options that come due this week.

Despite the BOJ's carefully orchestrated steps to phase out its controversial yield curve control (YCC) policy and hints of an imminent end to negative interest rates, the piecemeal moves have done little to prop up the yen, particularly as central banks globally maintain their hawkish rhetoric of higher-for-longer rates.

"I think the market has come to the realisation that the Bank of Japan is going to exit its policy but at a very, very, very slow and cautious pace," said Rodrigo Catril, senior FX strategist at National Australia Bank (NAB).

"A weak yen is probably going to stay here for a little bit longer, and the market has been testing to see what the appetite is, particularly for the (Ministry of Finance) and the BOJ, to allow for weaker levels."

Japanese authorities in September last year intervened in the currency market to boost the yen for the first time since 1998, after a BOJ decision to maintain its ultra-loose monetary policy drove the yen as low as 145 per dollar.

It intervened again in October 2022 after the yen plunged to a 32-year low of 151.94.

GOVT TO TAKE ALL POSSIBLE STEPS

Japanese Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki said on Tuesday that the government would take all possible steps necessary to respond to currency moves, repeating his usual mantra that excessive swings were undesirable.

Suzuki made the remarks when asked about impacts from the weak yen on households which have been pressured by rising living costs due to higher import prices for fuel and food.

"What's important is to maximise positive effects from the weak yen while mitigating negatives," Suzuki told reporters.

The government is already taking steps to ease the burden on households through a proposed economic package for this fiscal year ending in March 2024, Suzuki said, but made no mention of further measures including whether Japan would intervene in the currency market.

Many in the market are focusing on interest rate differentials, with the prolonged monetary tightening in the US a factor in the recent forex moves, Bank of Japan's deputy governor Shinichi Uchida told lawmakers at the parliament.

INFLATION AND THE FED

Outside of Asia, traders also had their attention on US inflation figures due later on Tuesday, which will provide further clarity on whether the Federal Reserve would need to raise interest rates further to tame inflation.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell and his chorus of policymakers have in recent days pushed back against market expectations that the US central bank was done with its aggressive rate-hike cycle after it held rates steady at its latest policy meeting.

The comments have kept the US dollar bid, and the greenback rose marginally to 105.64 against a basket of currencies.

Sterling steadied at $1.22775, while the euro last bought $1.0701, having largely traded sideways over the past few sessions.

The New Zealand dollar languished near a one-week low and last stood at $0.5879.

"Overall, the market is also kind of worn out by all messages coming from central banks and the higher-for-longer and wait-and-see mode is keeping volatility low," said NAB's Catril.

"We need to wait for that CPI number tonight, which could be a bit of a shaker. If it's strong, then obviously it brings in the idea that another rate hike from the Fed is there."

Down Under, the Australian dollar edged 0.03 per cent higher to $0.63785.

A survey on Tuesday showed Australian business conditions held firm in October even as confidence slipped a little, a resilience that will be tested by higher borrowing costs following a rise in official interest rates last week.  

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