By Samuel Indyk
LONDON (Reuters) – The U.S. dollar rose to a two-week high as rising U.S. Treasury yields supported the greenback, pushing the Japanese yen to its lowest level against the dollar in two decades.
The yen dropped to a 20-year low of 133 per dollar, levels that had previously been highlighted as intervention territory, a day after central bank governor Haruhiko Kuroda reiterated an unwavering commitment to “powerful” monetary stimulus.
The yen is sensitive to interest rate differentials between Japanese debt and U.S. bonds.
Benchmark 10-year Treasury yields had climbed as high as 3.064% in Tokyo trading for the first time in almost four weeks, before slipping back to 3.0251%. Spreads between 10-year U.S. and Japanese debt held at 277 bps, not far from a 3-1/2 year high of 292 bps hit last month.
“Lots of central banks are hawkish, the Bank of Japan is not and that’s why the yen is going down,” said James Lord, Global Head of FXEM Strategy at Morgan Stanley, who does not expect the central bank to step in to provide relief to the currency.
“I think for intervention to be credible and successful, it needs to be coordinated and also consistent with your monetary policy stance,” he said.
The dollar index, which measures the dollar against a basket of six currencies including the yen, rose as much as 0.39%, extending on Monday’s 0.26% advance and hitting its strongest level since May 23, before trimming its advance.
The euro slipped 0.14% to $1.0680 ahead of the European Central Bank’s policy-setting meeting on Thursday, where they are expected to announce an end to bond purchases, paving the way for a first rate increase in 11 years at the July meeting.
The British pound fell to its lowest level in nearly three weeks at $1.2433 before trimming losses as political headwinds for British Prime Minister Johnson unnerved investors.
Johnson survived a confidence vote 211 to 148, but his 59% share of the vote was less than the 63% achieved by his predecessor Theresa May in her confidence vote of December 2018 who was replaced seven months later.
The Australian dollar gained as much as 0.76% immediately after the Reserve Bank of Australia hiked rates by more than expected, but quickly shed gains to trade 0.1% lower.
Analysts at ING highlighted China’s economic outlook and the link between the aussie and short-term rate differentials for the reversal.
“In our view, this is another testament to how short-term rate differentials have de-linked from AUD/USD dynamics and how markets are still reluctant to turn less bearish on AUD given its exposure to China’s clouded demand outlook,” ING analysts said in an emailed note.
New Zealand’s dollar fell 0.63% to $0.6452.
China’s yuan eased from a one-month high against the dollar, pressured by broad strength in the greenback, while some investors gauged the pace of economic recovery after Shanghai lifted its COVID-19 lockdown.
Cryptocurrency bitcoin sank 5.8% to $29,527, erasing Monday’s 4.89% advance and leaving it languishing well below the psychological $30,000 mark as risk sentiment weakened amid declines in most global stock markets on Tuesday.
(Reporting by Samuel Indyk; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore and Chizu Nomiyama)