Dollar sinks below 132 yen as traders boost recession bets
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[August 01, 2022] By
Saikat Chatterjee
LONDON (Reuters) - The U.S. dollar declined
to its lowest level in more than six weeks against the Japanese yen on
Monday as investors ramped up bets that aggressive Federal Reserve
monetary policy would tip the economy into a recession.
With traditional market gauges of recession such as yield curve spreads
pinned near their lowest levels this year, punters have ramped up bets
in recent days that U.S. interest rates will peak by the end of 2022.
The U.S. economy shrank for a second straight quarter, data released
last week showed, intensifying an ongoing debate over whether the
country is, or will soon be, in recession.
Outright ten-year U.S. Treasury yields held near their lowest levels in
four months on Monday and nearly 12 bps below levels when the Federal
Reserve raised interest rates by 75 bps last week.
"With U.S. rates struggling to recover to levels seen prior to last
week's Fed meeting, the dollar started the week in a similar vein to how
it traded towards the end of last week," said Simon Harvey, head of FX
analysis at Monex Europe.
"That is, the dollar is exposed to currencies with cheap valuations."
The dollar sank to its lowest level versus the yen since mid-June below
132 yen, down more than 5% from a late 1998 peak of nearly 140 yen which
it hit last month.
With China's official measure of factory activity contracting in July as
new virus flare-ups weighed on demand, and German retail sales posting
their biggest year-on-year slump since 1994, the sentiment was decidedly
cautious in London trading.
A broader index of the dollar against its rivals weakened 0.6% to
105.30, its lowest level since early July, as traders cut their long
dollar positions, according to latest weekly positioning data.
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U.S. dollar banknotes are displayed in this illustration taken,
February 14, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
"Markets are now locking horns with central banks in terms of their efforts to
aggressively hikes rates to try and rein in inflation, with markets taking an
increasingly confident view that central banks will have to abandon their
inflation quest due to looming recession risks," said Marc Ostwald, chief
economist at ADM Investor Services.
The yield gap between 10-year U.S. Treasuries and equivalent Japanese debt held
near its tightest level in nearly four months around 245 bps, denting the
dollar's appeal.
Data at the end of last week tossed the dollar in both directions, with it
rising initially after the personal consumption expenditures price index showed
the fastest inflation since 2005, only to sink after the final University of
Michigan report - closely watched by Fed policymakers - showed slipping consumer
inflation expectations.
The big economic focus for this week will be the monthly U.S. jobs report on
Friday.
The euro benefited from the general dollar weakness, with the single currency
rising 0.3% to $1.0253, continuing its consolidation near the middle of its
range over the past week and a half.
The Aussie dollar rose 0.7% to $0.7042 to a six-week high before a central bank
rate hike on Tuesday, where policymakers are widely expected to lift its cash
rate by 50 basis points to 1.85%. That would be the fourth increase since May
and the most aggressive tightening in decades.
(Reporting by Saikat Chatterjee; Editing by Jan Harvey and Jane Merriman)
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