Onceagain major forex rates traded in limited ranges ahead of a bigWednesday coming up with:
- UKinflation data,
- theFederal Open Market Committee (FOMC) statement,
- andFederal Reserve Chair Powell’s news conference.
Theearly part of the session brought comments from US Treasury SecretaryYellen on how the US views potential intervention on the yen. USD/JPYdribbled a little lower on the remarks. These were soon followed byintervention-related comments from Japan's Finance Ministry's ViceFinance Minister for International Affairs Kanda, often referred toas Japan's 'top currency diplomat'. USD/JPY lost a further fewpoints. As the headline to this post says, though, ranges werelimited and that applied to USD/JPY.
Datafrom Japan today showed exports fell for the second consecutivemonth.
Thescheduled event of the session was the People's Bank of China policyrate setting. Loan Prime Rates (LPR) remain unchanged at today's ratesetting, as expected:
- 3.45%for the one year
- 4.20%for the five year.
AsI post a news conference attended by representatives from thePeople's Bank of China, the National Development and ReformCommission of the People's Republic of China (NDRC), the Ministry ofFinance, and the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology isunderway. So far there have been plenty of comments but nothing outof the ordinary. See bullets above. Zou Lan, head of the monetarypolicy department at the People's Bank of China (PBOC), did emphasizethat:
- "Peopleusually discuss more about thee exchange rate of the yuan against thedollar, but in fact, the exchange rate of the yuan against a basketof currencies can more comprehensively reflect the changes in thevalue of the currency".
Priorto this, the Bank set the USD/CNY reference rate at its lowest sinceAugust 14.
Asianequity markets followed on from a weak Wall Street lead:
- Japan’s Nikkei 225 -0.36%
- China’s Shanghai Composite -0.38%
- Hong Kong’s Hang Seng -0.5%
- South Korea’s KOSPI -0.1%
- Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 -0.6%
Offshore yuan update:
This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at
www.forexlive.com.
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