Yield trends will continue to be watched closely and the yen will be vulnerable from the rise in US yields. There will be yen support from capital repatriation over the next few weeks ahead of the fiscal year-end and there will also be exporter selling to take advantage of any yen weakness. From a medium-term perspective, overall confidence in the Japanese fundamentals is likely to remain weak as the rising debt burden continues to sap confidence. In this context, the yen is likely to secure only short-lived support.
The dollar found support close to 82.20 against the yen during the week and advanced to an 8-week high near 83.90 before correcting slightly lower. The yen was generally weaker on the crosses with Sterling at a six-month high.
The US currency was unable to make a further attack on the 84 level against the yen late in the week and dipped to lows near 83.20 during the US session. There was a decline in US yields which had a negative impact on the dollar although technical factors were a key influence.
As expected, the Bank of Japan left interest rates on hold in the 0.00 – 0.10% range following the latest council meeting. The bank also raised its economic assessment for the first time since May and there will be some cautious optimism that the Japanese economic performance will improve. There were indications that the Finance Ministry is concerned over the risk of further credit-rating downgrades
Sterling:
Monetary policy will remain an extremely important focus and, given the rise in inflation, there will be further expectations that the Bank of England will move to increase interest rates during the second quarter. Higher yields will offer some Sterling support, but there will also be further fears surrounding the economy, especially as any increase in interest rates would weaken confidence at a time when fiscal tightening is starting to have a significant impact. Overall confidence in the UK economy will remain weak and Sterling’s best defence still comes from a lack of confidence in the other major economies.
Sterling found support on dips to below 1.60 against the dollar and pushed higher to test resistance levels just above 1.62 late in the week in volatile trading. Sterling also advanced to highs beyond 0.84 against the Euro.
The latest UK consumer inflation data was broadly in line with expectations as the headline rate rose to 4.0% from 3.7% and there was a core rate of 3.0%. There had been some speculation over an even higher rate and Sterling retreated following the data release. The unemployment data was also slightly weaker than expected.
Bank of England Governor King was forced to issue a letter of explanation over the high inflation rate and he pointed to further upside inflation risks in the short-term. He also stated that there was a very high degree of uncertainty over the outlook and that there were important splits within the MPC.
In its quarterly report with the Bank of England raising its inflation forecasts at the same time as the GDP growth forecasts were lowered. Governor King was very anxious to emphasize that the bank does not endorse market interest rate expectations and he also cautioned that the pace of monetary tightening is liable to be slower than anticipated by markets. King’s comments had a substantial impact with Sterling weakening sharply on a scaling back of 2011 rate increases even though the report still suggested that rates would be increased.
MPC member Sentence maintained his call for policy tightening with comments that a series of interest rate increases were required to bring inflation back under control and keep expectations under control. The February MPC minutes will be watched very closely next week to see how close the Bank of England was to raising rates and to assess the potential timing of any future increase. |