UNITED STATES April 28 2016 8:37 PM
NEW YORK (Scrap Register): BNP Paribas sees further weakness in the U.S. dollar. The Bank of Japan did not change monetary policy overnight, surprising most market participants and bolstering the yen against the U.S. currency.
Dollar/yen “has already declined substantially but we see scope for the sell-off to extend further,” BNP Paribas said, listing a mid-year forecast of 108 yen.
“Furthermore, we would expect any rallies in USDJPY to prove short-lived as they will likely receive very good selling interest from domestic Japanese investors who will increasingly look to buy JPY into weakness in order to hedge their foreign-currency exposure as perceptions of further sustained JPY weakness continue to dissolve,” BNP Paribas noted.
Meanwhile, BNP Paribas looks for the euro to rise further as well. The bank points out that the U.S. Federal Open Market Committee Wednesday made only incremental changes to its policy statement, leaving forward guidance unchanged.
“Overall, the mixed message has done little to shift the market towards increased pricing for a near-term resumption of Fed hikes,” analyst at BNP Paribas added.
“The Fed’s continued willingness to signal steady policy even as the risk environment and inflation expectations improve leaves the USD vulnerable, particularly versus the current-account-surplus currencies. We remain long EURUSD.” Just before 10 a.m.
EDT, the dollar was down to 108.693 yen from 111.454 late Wednesday, while the euro was up to $1.13299 from $1.13239. Metals traders closely monitor moves in the dollar since precious and base metals alike often move inversely to the U.S. currency.
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