Investing.com– Most Asian currencies moved in a flat-to-low range on Friday, pressured by strength in the dollar as traders positioned for a slower pace of interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve in 2025.
Regional trading volumes remained slim on account of the new year holidays, with Japanese markets remaining closed until next week.
The Chinese yuan was among the worst performers in Asia, hitting its weakest level in nearly 16 months as a Financial Times report said the Peopleās Bank of China will cut interest rates further in 2025.Ā
The yuan, along with its regional peers, was also nursing steep losses in 2024, as the dollar benefited from a hawkish Fed and the prospect of protectionist policies under incoming President Donald Trump.
Dollar at 2-yr high as rate cut bets easeĀ
The and fell 0.1% in Asian trade after racing to a fresh two-year high on Thursday.
The greenbackās latest round of gains came after weekly data read stronger than expected, indicating that the labor market remained strong. A strong labor market gives the Fed more headroom in considering future monetary easing.
The central bank signaled during its December meeting that it will cut interest rates at a substantially slower pace in 2025, citing concerns over sticky inflation.
Resilience in the U.S. economy also gives the Fed less impetus to cut rates, although the Atlanta Fedās was revised lower for the fourth quarter on Thursday.Ā
Chinese yuan weakens as PBOC flags more rate cutsĀ
The Chinese yuan was among the worst performers in Asia, with the pair rising nearly 0.4% to 7.3275 yuan- its highest level since September 2023.
The FT reported that the PBOC will cut interest rates further in 2025, as the central bank pivots to a more conventional monetary policy structure under a singular benchmark interest rate.
The monetary policy reform comes as a slew of liquidity measures largely failed to stimulate Chinaās economy over the past two years. This is expected to elicit more monetary easing by the PBOC, which bodes poorly for the yuan.Ā
The yuan was already nursing losses for the week, as purchasing managers index data released earlier showed slowing growth in Chinaās manufacturing sector.
Broader Asian currencies moved in a tight range, but were nursing steep losses in recent months as traders positioned for a slower pace of U.S. rate cuts in 2025.Ā
The Japanese yenās pair fell 0.1% after hitting an over five-month high in late-December.
The Australian dollarās pair rose 0.2%, while the South Korean wonās pair fell 0.2% amid repeated assurances of financial stability from the government.Ā
The Indian rupeeās pair steadied at 85.8 rupees after hitting a record high above 86 rupees earlier this week.Ā
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