Asia FX muted despite Fed cut bets; Japanese yen slides after PM Ishiba resigns

Achmad Shoffan
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Most Asian currencies held steady on Monday as investors firmed up expectations of a Federal Reserve rate cut next week, while the Japanese yen slid after Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba’s resignation fueled political uncertainty in the world’s fourth-largest economy.

As of 02:46 GMT, the US Dollar Index, which measures the greenback against a basket of major currencies, traded 0.1% higher in Asia hours, after sharp losses on Friday.

Yen tumbles after Japan PM Ishiba resigns

The Japanese yen’s USD/JPY pair jumped as much as 0.8% to 148.57 yen on Monday, and traded 0.5% higher at 148.15 yen at the time of writing.

The slide came after Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba resigned, deepening political uncertainty and unsettling financial markets already under strain.

Ishiba stepped down on Sunday following heavy election losses and growing internal party dissent, raising questions about Japan’s fiscal and monetary policy outlook.

Attention has turned to Ishiba’s successor, with ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) heavyweight Sanae Takaichi seen as a leading contender. Takaichi is known for supporting looser fiscal and monetary policies, which could buoy equities but add further pressure on the yen and bond markets.

In other news, data showed that Japan’s economy grew faster than first estimated in the second quarter, boosted by stronger consumption and inventories.

Fed cut bets firm; Indian rupee hits fresh record low

Elsewhere, investors were cautiously optimistic about a potential interest rate reduction by the U.S. central bank at its next week’s meeting.

Last week, data showed that U.S. job growth weakened sharply in August and the unemployment rate increased to nearly a four-year high.

“Consumers are already worried about squeezed spending power from tariffs and are now increasingly concerned about job security,” ING analysts said in a note.

“That justifies the Federal Reserve taking early action even if some members are not fully comfortable with the inflation story. We look for 25bp rate cuts in September, October and December with a further 50bp of cuts in early 2026,” they added.

Still, regional moves were subdued over caution on U.S. tariffs and political unrest in Japan.

In China, both the yuan’s onshore USD/CNY and offshore pairs USD/CNH ticked 0.1% higher.

The South Korean won’s USD/KRW pair gained 0.2%, while the Singapore dollar’s USD/SGD inched up 0.1%.

The Australian dollar’s AUD/USD pair traded flat.

The Indian rupee’s USD/INR was largely unchanged after hitting a fresh record high of 88.36 rupees earlier in the session, pressured by steep U.S. trade tariffs.

“Looking ahead, active RBI (Reserve Bank of India) intervention is expected to cap USD/INR around 89.0 in the near term, helping to stabilise currency markets amid external headwinds,” ING analysts said in a separate note.


Source :

https://www.investing.com/news/forex-news/asia-fx-muted-despite-fed-cut-bets-japanese-yen-slides-after-pm-ishiba-resigns-4228025

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