investingLive European FX news wrap: JPY down as Takaichi opposes further BoJ rate hikes

Forex Short News

The main highlight of the session was the Japanese Yen as the currency sold off across the board following a Mainichi report saying that Takaichi signalled opposition for further BoJ rate hikes at last week’s meeting with Governor Ueda. Her dovish views are of course well known, but the yen will continue to weaken as long as the rate hikes get pushed out. The economic data hasn’t been supporting a rate hike either.

Other than that, we haven’t got any notable news or data release. The US Supreme Court decision on Trump’s tariffs continues to reverberate across markets as uncertainty remains high, but overall nothing has really changed. At the margin, we could say that things improved a little bit as the average effective tariff rate fell.

We also had Fed’s Bostic speaking but he basically repeated the same old stuff. His focus remains on inflation which isn’t surprising given that he’s been holding a hawkish stance for several quarters. The most interesting comment was from Fed’s Waller yesterday as he mentioned that in case we see a repeat of the strong January’s NFP, he would be comfortable holding rates steady.

In the American session, we get the weekly US ADP jobs data and the US Consumer Confidence report. The weekly ADP was a market moving indicator only on the first releases, then it stopped being important. Nonetheless, the data has been showing significant improvement like many other US labour market data.

The US Consumer Confidence is expected at 87.1 vs 84.5 prior. The last report surprised to the downside. The Chief Economist at Conference Board wrote: “confidence collapsed in January, as consumer concerns about both the present situation and expectations for the future deepened. All five components of the Index deteriorated, driving the overall Index to its lowest level since May 2014 (82.2), surpassing its COVID-19 pandemic depths.”

This is a market moving report, especially when the deviations from expectations are large, but at this point it’s very unlikely to change anything for the Fed or the market.

This article was written by Giuseppe Dellamotta at investinglive.com.