Strong Euro nears nine-year high versus Japanese yen

Kitco Media
By Anonymous
Published:
Updated:
Reuters
 By Alun John
 LONDON, April 24 (Reuters) - The euro gained a touch and
the Japanese yen softened on Monday, at the start of a week
containing a closely-watched Bank of Japan meeting and the last
few data releases before Federal Reserve and European Central
Bank rate decisions in early May. 
 The euro  was up 0.25% against the dollar at
$1.1015, back above $1.10 for the first time since it hit a϶-month high of $1.10755 earlier this month. 
 German business morale rose slightly in April, a survey
showed on Monday, adding to positive signs as Europe's largest
economy hopes to have dodged a winter recession, and there were
also hawkish remarks from Belgian central bank chief and ECB
policy maker Pierre Wunsch. 
 The euro's gains were most striking against the Japanese yen
up 0.63% to 148.3 yen,  as the yen was pressured by
remarks from the new Bank of Japan governor Kazuo Ueda about the
need to maintain monetary easing. 
 The euro is a whisker away from October's 148.385 yen, and
a break past that would be its highest since late 2014. 
 The dollar also climbed 0.36% against the yen to 134.60.
  
 Beyond the excitement of the euro/yen cross, currency
markets were quieter, as traders waited for key central bank
meetings, the first of which is the Bank of Japan on Friday, the
first Ueda will chair. 
 Ueda is widely expected to maintain the BOJ's current
ultra-easy yield curve control (YCC) policy, having reassured
markets since succeeding Haruhiko Kuroda early this month that
any change in policy won't happen quickly.
 "We're in a pre-ECB, pre-Fed period where FX volatility has
gone to die for a bit," said Simon Harvey, head of FX analysis
at Monex Europe. 
 Harvey said markets were waiting for Friday because, as well
as the BOJ meeting, growth and inflation data from both Germany
and France were due.
 "Not only are euro/dollar and dollar/yen two of the largest
pairs there are a lot of factors that could drive further moves,
that are just waiting for a catalyst," he said. 
 Both the Fed and the ECB will meet next week, but before
that markets will digest U.S. first quarter GDP and personal
consumption expenditures (PCE) data, looking for signs of
economic strain and evidence of sticky inflation for clues on
the Fed's policy path. 
 Policymakers are widely expected to raise rates by anotherЁ basis points  at next week's Federal Open Market
Committee (FOMC) meeting, though the focus will be on guidance
for future moves. 
 Markets are expecting the ECB to raise rates by a quarter
point, with the possibility of a 50 basis points hike. Euro zone
inflation and growth data are also due this week.  
 The Swedish central bank also meets this week, on Wednesday,
though Barclays said a priced-in 50 basis points hike from the
Riksbank was unlikely to help the crown much beyond limiting its
downside. 
 The Swedish currency touched 11.475 per euro in March, its
weakest since 2009, and has failed to recover much since then
  . It was last at 11.33 per euro and 10.32 per dollar
  .
 Elswhere, sterling was flat at $1.2435  , and the
Swiss franc was slightly firmer at 0.8903 per dollar.  

 
World FX rates 
 
 (Reporting by Alun John in London, additional reporting by Rae
Wee in Singapore; Editing by Kirsten Donovan and Alex
Richardson)
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