USD/JPY fails to justify dovish signals from the Bank of Japan’s (BoJ) latest update as bears keep the reins while refreshing weekly low around 133.90 during early Thursday. In doing so, the Yen pair takes clues from the broad US Dollar weakness amid cautious optimism and downbeat Treasury bond yields.
Also read: BoJ April meeting Summary of Opinions: Must continue current easy policy given uncertainty over global outlook
US Dollar Index (DXY) drops for the second consecutive day, mildly offered near 101.35 by the press time, as the US inflation marked the first fall past 5.0% in two years. The US inflation details, however, weren’t that negative and seemed to have kept the Federal Reserve (Fed) away from the rate cut move until September 2023, per the Fed Fund Futures.
That said, US Consumer Price Index (CPI) eased to 4.9% YoY for April versus market expectations of reprinting 5.0% inflation mark, marking the first below 5.0% print in two years. The MoM figures, however, matched the upbeat 0.4% forecasts compared to 0.1% previous readings. Further, the CPI ex Food & Energy, known as the core CPI, matched 5.5% and 0.4% market consensus on a yearly and monthly basis respectively versus 5.6% and 0.4% priors in that order.
On the other hand, the US 10-year and two-year Treasury bond yields snapped a four-day winning streak the previous day, also marked the biggest daily loss in a week, as recession woes underpinned the US bond demand. That said, the benchmark US bond coupons remain pressured around 3.42% and 3.91% at the latest.
Elsewhere, the US policymakers failed to seal the debt-ceiling deal in their first attempt on Wednesday but let the ball rolling by allowing office members to discuss the details and try again on Friday, which in turn prod the market sentiment. On the same line is the absence of major negatives from the banking front, as well as upbeat earnings and mostly softer US data, which in turn pushed back the bank fears.
Against this backdrop, S&P 500 Futures print mild gains after Wall Street’s mixed close whereas Japan’s Nikkei 225 prints mild losses around 29,000 by the press time.
Looking forward, a light calendar in Japan may allow the USD/JPY pair bears to take a breather ahead of the US Producer Price Index (PPI) for April and other second-tier data relating to employment, as well as activities. Though, risk catalysts will be more observed amid the market’s cautious optimism.
A clear downside break of the 21-DMA and a one-month-old ascending trend line, respectively near 134.60 and 134.25, keeps USD/JPY bears hopeful.
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