Currencies

Dollar dips, yen steady as BOJ policy shift beckons By Reuters



© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Japanese yen and U.S. dollar banknotes are seen with a currency exchange rate graph in this illustration picture taken June 16, 2022. REUTERS/Florence Lo/Illustration/File Photo

By Harry Robertson and Ankur Banerjee

LONDON/SINGAPORE (Reuters) -The dollar edged down a touch on Monday as traders looked ahead to central bank meetings this week, with the Bank of Japan potentially on the brink of ending negative rates and the market waiting for the Federal Reserve’s projections for rate cuts.

As well as Japan and the United States, central banks in Britain, Australia, Norway, Switzerland, Mexico, Taiwan, Brazil and Indonesia are all due to meet.

The , which measures the U.S. currency against six other major currencies, was last down 0.1% at 103.38. It has risen around 2% this year as the U.S. economy has fared better than expected, causing investors to rein in their bets that the Fed will cut rates quickly and deeply in 2024.

Markets are now pricing in 73 basis points of cuts this year, down from around 140 bps at the start of the year, with around a 60% chance of the first rate cut coming by June, according to LSEG data.

The focus on Wednesday will be on whether Fed policymakers change their projections of rate cuts, or dot plots, for the year. The Fed in December projected 75 basis points of easing in 2024.

The dollar was little changed against the Japanese yen at 149.07 yen per dollar.

The yen has had a whirlwind few weeks, weakening to 150.88 to the dollar last month. It then rebounded to a one-month high of 146.48 at the start of March, on the back of stronger than expected economic data and rising bets that the BOJ is preparing to end eight years of negative interest rates.

Bigger-than-expected pay hikes by major Japanese firms cemented expectations that the central bank will exit ultra-loose monetary policy, potentially as soon as at its meeting on Tuesday.

“If the BOJ is not going to move then the Bank has done a poor job of damping expectations,” said Colin Asher, senior economist at Japanese bank Mizuho in London. “Not moving now would likely spur more volatility than moving.”

The euro last bought $1.0896, while sterling was at $1.2745 ahead of the Bank of England meeting on Thursday when the central bank is expected to hold rates at 5.25%. Both were up around 0.l% against the dollar.

Australia’s central bank is due to meet on Tuesday and is widely expected to hold rates steady. The Australian dollar was 0.18% higher at $0.6571.

The dollar was steady against the Swiss franc at 0.8838 francs. Some investors think the Swiss National Bank could cut interest rates on Thursday, with inflation having long been within its 0-2% target range.



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