Investing.com– Most Asian currencies moved little on Thursday and the dollar steadied ahead of key U.S. inflation data, while the yen strengthened sharply as a Bank of Japan member called for an end to negative interest rates.
Regional currencies were nursing overnight losses after several Federal Reserve members said that more work was needed to achieve the bank’s 2% annual inflation target, while data underscored resilience in the U.S. economy.
But the dollar fell slightly in Asian trade amid pressure from a sharp rise in the .
Yen strengthens as BOJ member calls for end to stimulus
The yen firmed 0.6% against the dollar after BOJ member Hajime Takata said on Thursday that the central bank should consider an exit from its ultra-loose policies.
Takata called for an end to the BOJ’s yield curve control and negative interest rates, citing progress towards achieving the central bank’s 2% inflation target.
Takata’s comment fueled speculation that the central bank will raise interest rates by as soon as April- a notion that was already in play after stronger-than-expected inflation data released earlier this week.
But other economic readings for January- specifically and – still painted a middling picture of the Japanese economy, which had unexpectedly fallen into recession in the fourth quarter.
Economic weakness could potentially delay an early pivot by the BOJ.
Other Asian currencies moved in a flat-to-low range on Thursday.
The rose 0.4%, recovering sharply from steep losses in the prior session after softer-than-expected data. Underwhelming data on Thursday furthered bets that the Reserve Bank will have little cause to keep raising interest rates.
The was flat, with focus turning to for the December quarter, which is expected to show some cooling after two years of stellar Indian economic growth.
The tread water ahead of key data due on Friday, which is expected to offer more cues on Asia’s biggest economy.
The and both moved sideways.
Dollar edges lower, PCE inflation awaited
The and both fell 0.1% in Asian trade, coming under pressure from a strong yen.
Focus was squarely on data- the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, which is due later on Thursday and expected to reiterate that inflation remained sticky in January.
A chorus of Fed officials said the central bank was in no hurry to begin cutting interest rates, citing concerns over sticky inflation.
Fed officials and both said on Wednesday that more work was needed to meet the Fed’s 2% annual inflation target.
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