investingLive Asia-Pacific FX news wrap: Regional stocks higher after strong Wall St. lead

Forex Short News

News
and data flow was very light during the session here. Major FX rates
traded in small ranges only, characterised by a little softness for
the US dollar early before recovering. Regional equities caught a tailwind from the up move
on Wall Street on Monday. Australian rare earth miners surged on the
US$8.5 bn US critical minerals deal announced Monday.

Data
from New Zealand showed a larger trade deficit in September than in
August. Exports in September were lower than in August while imports
were a touch higher. Further rate cuts are expected from the Reserve
Bank of New Zealand due to concerns over growth.

From
the US the Wall Street Journal reported that a $US20 billion private
bank loan to support Argentina’s President Milei is stalled as
lenders, including JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs, demand a U.S. Treasury
backstop before lending to the “virtually-bankrupt” nation.

Meanwhile, FHFA
Director William Pulte confirmed the Trump administration is “opportunistically evaluating” a public offering for Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac, potentially by end-2025, to finally end their
2008-era government conservatorship.

From
China was the news that China’s Commerce Ministry will permit non-state trade imports of 257 million metric tons of crude oil in
2026. This is the same as this year and indicates Beijing is not
confident in growing demand, or that stockpiles are sufficient.

The
People’s Bank of China set CNY at its strongest since October 15
last year at the reference rate fix today. USD/CNY traded lower at
the open.

Japan’s
new PM Takaichi began naming her cabinet today. The yen lost some
ground.

Gold stayed close to its new record high.

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