Investing.com– Most Asian currencies kept to a tight range on Thursday after clocking strong overnight gains as U.S. consumer inflation data read softer than expected and put the dollar close to a seven-month low.
Sentiment towards regional markets was also aided by positive economic readings from Japan, Australia and to some extent, China.
The and hovered around the mid-102 level in Asian trade, remaining close to a seven-month low.
data on Wednesday read a touch lower than expected, ramping up bets on a September rate cut. But traders grew more biased towards a 25 basis point cut over a 50 bps cut, as the CPI data still clocked a month-on-month increase.
This notion limited gains in most Asian currencies, although broader risk-driven markets, particularly stocks, rose sharply.
Japanese yen steady as Q2 GDP beats expectations
The Japanese yen steadied on Thursday after a middling performance in overnight trade, as improved risk sentiment sapped safe haven demand for the currency. The pair hovered around 147.25 yen.
data showed Japan’s economy grew more than expected in the second quarter, aided by a rebound in as Japanese wages grew.
The reading tied into the Bank of Japan’s outlook that improved wages will boost the Japanese economy, giving the central bank more headroom to keep raising interest rates this year.
Such a scenario heralds more strength in the yen, which was already sitting on a stellar rally against the dollar over the past month.
Chinese yuan weakens amid mixed economic signals
The Chinese yuan weakened on Thursday, with the pair rising 0.2% as a swathe of readings presented a mixed picture of the Chinese economy.
Chinese grew more than expected, inspiring some confidence in improving consumer spending and inflation.
But grew less than expected, as did . China’s also unexpectedly rose to 4.2%.
The readings showed that while some policy measures from Beijing were aiding consumer spending, the overall economy still remained under pressure.
Australian dollar rises on strong jobs data
The Australian dollar was the best performer in Asia, with the pair rising 0.5% after data showed outsized growth in the for a second consecutive month in July.
The reading indicated that Australia’s labor market was running hot despite a broader softening in the economy, potentially underpinning inflation and giving the Reserve Bank of Australia more headroom to keep interest rates high.
Traders speculated that the RBA could even hike interest rates further to cool the labor sector, after Governor Michele Bullock warned last week that the central bank was open to raising rates further to combat sticky inflation.
Broader Asian currencies were muted amid market holidays in South Korea and India.