The
yen was among a host of currencies swept lower on the day, to
its lowest level versus the dollar since 1998, as the gap
between Japanese and U.S. benchmark yields widened after red hot
U.S. inflation data on Friday.
A sell-off across markets saw European stocks fall for a fifth
straight session, while Bitcoin tumbled 9% to 18-month lows
around $24,000.
The dollar index - which tracks the greenback against six major
peers - gained as much as 0.5% on the day to 104.75, close to
the two-decade peak of 105.01 hit in May. It was last up 0.2% at
104.63.
Central banks' efforts to curtail runaway inflation will remain
in focus this week.
The Federal Reserve and the Bank of England are expected to
raise interest rates at their meetings and there is a chance the
Swiss National Bank will do the same.
The Bank of Japan (BoJ) has so far resisted pressure to tighten
policy, weakening the country's currency. The policy divergence
has sent the yen down more than 15% against the dollar since
early March.
The yen fell as much as 0.6% on the day to 135.22 yen per
dollar, its lowest since 1998. It was last broadly flat at
134.37 yen per dollar.
Japan's top government spokesperson said on Monday that Tokyo
stood ready to "respond appropriately" if needed.
"Overall the fundamental developments continue to favour further
yen weakness it the near-term but market participants will be
more wary of the risk of intervention and/or a hawkish shift in
BoJ policy in the week ahead," currency analysts at MUFG said in
a note.
The downward pressure on the yen could encourage speculation of
a return to yen weakness not seen since the Asian financial
crisis in 1997, when it hit 140.00 - the last time Japan
directly intervened to support the currency, the note added.
The euro, sterling and the Swiss franc all fell to around
four-week lows versus the dollar on the day.
The euro slipped as much as 0.5% to $1.04560, and was last down
0.3% at $1.04775.
Sterling fell 0.8% to $1.22165, after data showed Britain's
economy unexpectedly shrank in April.
The Swiss franc dropped as much as 0.5% to 0.99230 franc per
dollar.
(Reporting by Iain Withers; Additional reporting by Alun John in
Hong Kong; Editing by Mark Potter)
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