• Dollar falls against the yen on political uncertainties

    21 Sep 2020 | Economic News

Dollar falls against the yen on political uncertainties

The dollar was on track for its fifth straight day of declines against the yen, which was at a seven-week high against the greenback on Friday as investors sought Japan’s safe-haven currency due to monetary policy, U.S. election uncertainty and the latest U.S.-China political tensions.

The dollar, after falling to 104.270 yen earlier in the session - its lowest level against Japan’s currency since July 31 - last traded at 104.38, down 0.33% on the day.

The U.S. dollar index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of its peers, was at 92.937 after last week’s decline from levels above 93.3.

The euro fell slightly, to $1.1833, and was set for a small weekly loss.

While strong British consumer spending helped sterling earlier in the day as investors bet on a solid recovery from COVID-19 induced lockdowns but it failed to hold its gains and was last down 0.25% against at $1.2940.

Tokyo markets will be closed on Monday and Tuesday next week, so investors positioning for thin liquidity could also have played a role in Friday’s yen move.

The New Zealand dollar strengthened overnight and hit its highest in a year and a half in early London trading, after the country’s finance minister sounded positive about the economy in television interviews. The Reserve Bank of New Zealand meets next week.


While the dollar was up against a basket of currencies it was on track for a weekly decline after two weeks of gains. Aside from political uncertainty Boris Schlossberg, managing director of FX strategy at BK Asset Management said Japan’s policy of yield curve control was also a factor as it was pushing up real interest rates.

“Japanese market conditions are much tighter than they seemingly appear despite QE from the Bank of Japan,” said Schlossberg. “That’s creating a distinct and significant tilt toward the yen.”

While U.S. equities have kept close to their record highs, Schlossberg said dollar weakness may signal more volatility to come ahead of the Nov. 3 U.S. elections where President Donald Trump with face-off with Democrat challenger Joe Biden.

“Markets always hate uncertainty. At this point everybody is convinced that an unambiguous win is not the most likely scenario,” he said.

Schlossberg also pointed to a Trump administration plan to ban WeChat and video-sharing app TikTok from U.S. app stores starting Sunday night, blocking Americans from the Chinese-owned platforms over national security concerns.

“It’s showing the diplomatic tug of war is not being resolved. The tensions are heightening rather than easing,” he said. “That’s not something the market likes to see.”


Net short dollar positions fall to $30.90 billion in latest week

Speculators reduced their net short dollar positions in the latest week, according to calculations by Reuters and U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission data released on Friday.

The value of the net short dollar position fell to $30.90 billion in the week ended Sept. 15, compared with a net short of $32.67 billion the previous week.


Reference: CNBC, Reuters

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