Yen slumps on Japan stimulus speculation

gdnonline.com – July 12, 2016 – Tokyo: The yen slumped on Tuesday on expectations that Tokyo is drawing up a fresh round of huge stimulus to kickstart the torpid Japanese economy.

After his ruling coalition swept weekend parliamentary elections, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said the government would unveil measures to kickstart growth, which local media said could be worth trillions of yen.

Speculation that Japan’s central bank may move at its meeting later this month also weighed on the yen, which fell against most of its major peers on Tuesday.

The dollar rose to 103.12 yen from 102.82 yen in New York, and well up from the 101.70 yen in Tokyo earlier Monday.

The euro jumped to 114.13 yen against 113.68 yen and strengthened to $1.1076 from 1.1057.

“Expectations of large fiscal stimulus following Abe’s big election win is behind the weakness in the yen,” Khoon Goh, head of Asia research at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group, told Bloomberg News.

The yen has picked up sharply as market turmoil at the start of the year — and Britain’s vote to leave the European Union last month — pushed traders to seek out lower-yielding, safer investments.

The pound rose to $1.3055 from $1.2997 after Britain’s ruling Conservatives prepared to crown their new leader to take over from David Cameron as prime minister.

Theresa May will step in on Wednesday after her only opponent for the leadership quit in a shock move Monday. The news provide a little certainty for the country as it looks to untangle itself from the EU over the coming years.

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