The USDJPY barely slumps as the Asian Pacific session begins, following a trading day where a strong US Dollar spurred by positive data from the United States was not enough to derail the Japanese Yen, which held to gains, even though they were minimal, as delineated by the USDJPY sliding 0.04%. Also, a looming monetary policy decision by the Bank of Japan (BoJ) in the docket bolstered the JPY. The USDJPY is trading at 146.20, down by 0.05%.
During the New York session, the US Department of Commerce reported that the United States economy grew faster than estimated. The Gross Domestic Product (GDP) for the third quarter jumped by 2.6%, smashing forecasts of 2.6%. Even though it emphasizes the economy’s resilience, it would not deter Federal Reserve’s officials from tightening monetary conditions.
In the same report, consumer spending weakened, a cheered signal by Fed officials, as they intend to cool down the economy, with data reporting a deceleration from Q2’s 2% to 1.4% in the last quarter.
Additionally, labor market data added to the US Dollar strength, with Initial Jobless Claims for the week ending on October 22 increased by 217K but lower than 220K foreseen and above the previous week’s 214K. Even though US data was positive, it was offset by US Durable Goods Orders for September, which expanded 0.4% MoM, less than 0.6% estimates, showing that inventories are building up.
The USDJPY reaction to US data releases was muted due to the influence of the US Treasury yields.
In the meantime, speculations about a possible Federal Reserve’s pivot are meandering around the financial markets throughout the week, with traders beginning to price in a less hawkish Fed. The US 10-year bond yield plunged 36 bps weekly from its highs at 4.289% to 3.929%, a headwind for the USDJPY. The positive correlation between the USDJPY and the US 10-year bond yield would likely boost or weigh on the US Dollar and the Japanese Yen.
Correlation between the US10-year bond yield and the USDJPY
On Friday, the Bank of Japan (BoJ) would reveal its monetary policy decision. The BoJ is expected to hold rates unchanged at -0.10%, and would likely stick to its Yield Curve Control (YCC) around 0.25%, aimed to keep its ultra-loose monetary policy stance intact.
Such policy was aimed at bringing the Japanese economy out of a deflationary scenario, which so far has been achieved, as shown by the inflation report, namely the Consumer Price Index (CPI) for August, hitting the 3% YoY threshold. But the BoJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda remains firm in his stance. However, the market has continued to test the JGB 10-year yield during the last month, as investors speculate that the BoJ could pivot from a dovish to a neutral stance sooner rather than later.
The USDJPY is still upward-biased despite ongoing interventions by the BoJ in the FX markets. If sellers want to regain control, they will need to break below the October 5 daily low at 143.84 so that the USDJPY can challenge the 50-day Exponential Moving Average (EMA). Even though the Relative Strength Index (RSI) dived towards the 50-midline, it remains in positive territory; hence, the buyers are in control.
USDJPY key resistance levels lie at the 20-day EMA at 146.98, followed by 147.00 and the October 26 daily high at 148.41. On the flip side, the USDJPY’s first support would be the 146.00 mark. The break below will expose the weekly low at 145.10, which, once cleared, will expose the previously mentioned 50-day EMA at 143.83.
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