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Asian Markets Brace for Federal Reserve Rate Cut Amid Yen Surge

Asian currencies saw muted activity in Monday’s holiday-thinned trade, with regional markets focused on the highly anticipated Federal Reserve meeting this week. While markets in Japan, China, and South Korea were closed for holidays, the Japanese yen made significant gains, hitting an eight-month high, as traders positioned ahead of key central bank meetings.

Yen Strengthens Ahead of BOJ Meeting

The Japanese yen emerged as the standout performer among Asian currencies, with the USD/JPY pair dropping 0.6% to 140.04, its lowest level since January 2023. The yen briefly dipped below the key 140 mark, a level it hadn’t breached all year. The surge in the yen came amid lower trading volumes, but it was also fueled by growing speculation that the Bank of Japan (BOJ) could deliver a hawkish outlook at its upcoming meeting on Friday.

With Japanese consumer inflation data expected to remain strong, pressure is mounting on the BOJ to tighten its monetary policy further, following a series of hawkish signals from bank officials. This has prompted traders to flock to the yen, anticipating potential rate hikes.

Dollar Weakens as Fed Rate Cut Speculation Grows

Meanwhile, the U.S. dollar slipped against major currencies, with the dollar index and futures both falling by 0.3% during Asian trade. Investors are on edge ahead of the Federal Reserve’s policy meeting on Wednesday, where a rate cut is widely expected.

However, uncertainty lingers over the size of the cut. Traders are split evenly between the chances of a 25 basis point or 50 basis point reduction, according to CME’s FedWatch tool. Despite this uncertainty, the Fed is anticipated to begin an easing cycle, with analysts forecasting at least 100 basis points in rate reductions by the end of 2024.

Broader Asian Currencies Show Limited Movement

Across other Asian markets, currencies displayed minimal fluctuations due to the low trading activity. The Australian dollar (AUD/USD) was a notable exception, rising 0.4%, while the Singapore dollar (USD/SGD) and Indian rupee (USD/INR) both dipped slightly. The offshore Chinese yuan (USD/CNH) edged lower but remained under the 7.1 level against the dollar.

As central banks prepare to make pivotal monetary policy decisions, Asian markets will be closely watching for any signals from the Federal Reserve and Bank of Japan, both of which are expected to set the tone for global financial markets in the coming months.

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