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Commodity currencies struggle, carry trade churn helps yen, Swiss franc

by Riah Marton
in Technology
Commodity currencies struggle, carry trade churn helps yen, Swiss franc
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COMMODITY currencies slid to multi-week lows on Wednesday (Jul 24) on weakening raw material prices, with the heaviest selling against the yen which surged to its highest in two months as short sellers bailed out ahead of next week’s central bank meeting.

The Canadian dollar hit a three-month low of C$1.38 per US dollar, ahead of a likely second rate cut in as many months by the Bank of Canada at its meeting later in the day.

The Australian dollar fell as much as 0.5 per cent and at US$0.6583 was only a few pips from chart support at the early June low. It fell more than 1 per cent on the yen to 101.79 yen and is down nearly 7 per cent against the Japanese currency in two weeks.

The New Zealand dollar fell 0.6 per cent to a near three-month low of US$0.5914.

The moves tracked falling prices for industrial metals such as iron ore and copper, which made 3½ month lows on a gloomy outlook for Chinese demand, and risk aversion in stock markets following some disappointing US earnings.

“We’re seeing softer demand in China and Asia in general and the kiwi and Aussie just being pulled down,” said Jason Wong, senior markets strategist at BNZ in Wellington.

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The euro suffered after soft business activity dataand was last down 0.1 per cent against the dollar at US$1.10842 and fell 0.14 per cent on the pound to 83.99 pence as the picture looked perkier in Britain.

But the European common currency continued to climb against peers to the north, and hit a new eight-month top on the Norwegian krone of 12.00 kroner and a two-month high of 11.727 on the Swedish krona.

“These are the two least liquid currencies in G10, and we suspect markets are particularly punishing this aspect and rebuilding those shorts that had been trimmed throughout May and June,” said Francesco Pesole FX strategist at ING.

In Asia, the risk of a rate hike for Japan and recent rounds of suspected currency intervention have speculators rushing to close what had been profitable “carry” trades funded in yen. The Bank of Japan reviews policy on next Tuesday and Wednesday.

In a carry trade investors borrow in a low-yielding currency to invest in higher-yielding assets denominated other currencies.

US dollar/yen went down nearly 1 per cent on Tuesday and fell another 0.7 per cent on Wednesday to its lowest since mid-May at 154.28 per US dollar. The yen is the best performing G10 currency against the US dollar in July so far.

Moves in other pairs have been larger, with the euro dropping 1.3 per cent on the yen Tuesday and a further 0.86 per cent to an 11-week low of 167.43 on Wednesday.

Mexico’s high-yielding peso dropped 2 per cent on the yen on Tuesday and another 1.1 per cent on Wednesday.

The churn in yen funded carry trades also had an effect on the other favoured funding currency, the Swiss franc, against which the US dollar was down 0.43 per cent at 0.8875 francs and the euro was down 0.57 per cent at 0.9620.

Later in the week, markets are waiting on US GDP and core PCE data to test expectations for two US rate cuts over the rest of this year. REUTERS

Tags: CarrychurncommoditycurrenciesfrancHelpsStruggleSwissTradeyen
Riah Marton

Riah Marton

I'm Riah Marton, a dynamic journalist for Forbes40under40. I specialize in profiling emerging leaders and innovators, bringing their stories to life with compelling storytelling and keen analysis. I am dedicated to spotlighting tomorrow's influential figures.

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