investingLive Asia-Pacific FX news wrap: USD steadies higher, gold struggled above US$4140

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Japan’s manufacturing sentiment surged to its highest since early 2022, led by autos and electronics as a weak yen and strong chip demand buoyed exporters. The service-sector mood held firm, though firms warned that Trump’s tariff policies could cloud the export outlook.

The upbeat Reuters Tankan survey reinforced expectations the Bank of Japan will remain patient on policy normalisation, with the weak yen continuing to support exports and equities, particularly in autos and tech. Even so, both the yen and Nikkei retreated during the session, with USD/JPY touching nine-month highs above 154.60. The sell-off wasn’t confined to Japan: the South Korean won also slid to its lowest since April 9.

In Australia, home loans surged beyond expectations in Q3 to a record high, marking the fastest increase since Q1 2021. The rise underscores how easier monetary conditions have reignited credit growth and property demand—giving the Reserve Bank yet another reason to stay cautious on policy easing.

Later, RBA Deputy Governor Andrew Hauser said policy remains restrictive but under review, with the board debating how tight conditions still are. He downplayed the consumer sentiment rebound, noting consumption shows only a modest, gradual recovery. His remarks reinforced expectations that the RBA will hold rates steady well into 2026, maintaining a mildly restrictive stance until clearer evidence of durable disinflation and stable growth emerges.

The Australian dollar eased alongside other majors amid a broader USD advance, with EUR, GBP, and NZD also weaker against the greenback.

Asia-Pac
stocks:

  • Japan
    (Nikkei 225) -0.1%
  • Hong
    Kong (Hang Seng) +0.6% Hong
    Kong stocks pushed to near a 1-month high
  • Shanghai
    Composite -0.2%
  • Australia
    (S&P/ASX 200) -0.1%

Gold dropped back from a triple top circa US$4145.

This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.