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				Against the dollar, the Japanese currency was on track for a 
				fifth consecutive session of gains on Tuesday, taking its 
				cumulative increase to nearly 4.5% in five trading sessions. In 
				early London trading, the currency was up 0.6% at 130.78 yen, 
				just below a high of 130.40 yen, a level last seen in early 
				June. 
				 
				Jitters about the impact of an impending visit to Taiwan by U.S. 
				House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi weighed on stocks 
				and sent investors scurrying into U.S. Treasuries. 
				 
				The benchmark 10-year Treasury yield fell to 2.516%, its lowest 
				since April, further narrowing the gap between ten-year U.S. 
				debt and equivalent Japanese bonds to 236 basis points (bps), 
				the lowest since early April. 
				 
				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, with 
				traders keenly watching for U.S. jobs data on Friday. 
				 
				"U.S. data releases and the reaction in U.S. yields through the 
				end of this week will be critical as JPY momentum has built a 
				considerable head of steam here," said John Hardy, head of FX 
				strategy at Saxo Bank. 
				 
				The Australian dollar fell nearly 1.5% after the Reserve Bank of 
				Australia raised rates by 50 bps to 1.85%, in line with 
				expectations. 
				 
				The bank said that even though more tightening was expected, it 
				was not on a pre-set path, which some investors interpreted as 
				future policy tightening may not be as aggressive. 
				 
				China's offshore yuan touched 6.7957 per dollar, its weakest 
				since mid-May. Some analysts attributed this partly to the 
				tensions around Pelosi's visit as well as poor economic data 
				from China over the weekend. 
				 
				The dollar index, which measures the greenback against six 
				peers, rose 0.3% to 105.65. 
				 
				(Reporting by Saikat Chatterjee; additional reporting by Alun 
				John in HONG KONG; Editing by Mark Potter) 
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