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Forex: Yen gives back some gains, dollar rebounds before US CPI

By Samuel Indyk and Rae Wee
       LONDON, Sept 12 (Reuters) - The yen slipped on Tuesday
after its biggest daily rise since mid-July the day before as
comments from Japan's top central banker on a possible end to
its negative interest rate policy reverberated throughout
markets. 
    The dollar, meanwhile, regained lost ground after clocking
its biggest daily fall since July 13, while the pound slipped
after mixed labour market data. 
    Bank of Japan (BOJ) Governor Kazuo Ueda told a newspaper
interview over the weekend the bank could get enough data by
year-end to determine whether it can end negative rates, remarks
that on Monday saw the yen clock its largest daily gain against
the dollar since July 12.
    The Japanese currency  JPY=EBS  was last 0.1% lower at
146.71 per dollar, after scaling a one-week top of 145.91 in the
previous session.
    "Ueda's comments were a little more balanced than you would
have thought from the market reaction," said Adam Cole, chief
currency strategist at RBC Capital Markets.
    "Japan is still a long way from meeting the criterion of
sustainable 2% inflation and the comments don't really change
much for me," Cole added.
    The yen has come under immense pressure against the dollar
as a result of growing interest rate differentials with the
United States, since the Federal Reserve began its aggressive
rate-hike cycle last year while the BOJ remains a dovish
outlier.
    Taking a different view, however, Japan's senior ruling
party official Hiroshige Seko said on Tuesday he took Ueda's
remarks as meaning that the central bank will continue with
monetary easing.
    Elsewhere, the U.S. dollar reversed some of its losses from
the previous session, with the euro  EUR=EBS  falling 0.3% to
$1.0718 after touching a one-week high of $1.0771 before
Thursday's European Central Bank policy announcement. 
    The pound fell after a mixed labour market report that
showed more signs of cooling in the three months to July, but
wage growth continued to rise quickly, and above the rate of
inflation. 
    "Drill down and if you strip out the public sector, private
sector pay barely increased in level terms between June and
July," said ING UK economist James Smith. 
    "With unemployment notching higher, the labour market data
doesn't scream a need to keep hiking rates much further."
    Sterling  GBP=D3  was last down 0.2% against the dollar at
$1.2479 and little changed against the euro. 
    
    US INFLATION DATA IN FOCUS
    Attention was now turning to U.S. inflation data for the
month of August due on Wednesday, with traders on the lookout
for whether the Federal Reserve has further to go in raising
rates.
    The U.S. dollar index  =USD , which ended last week with an
eight-week winning streak, rose 0.2% to 104.76, after falling
0.46% in the previous session, its biggest one-day drop since
July 13. 
    "The U.S. data is the main event of the week because the Fed
is so sensitive to incoming inflation data," RBC's Cole said,
noting that the bigger risk for the dollar is to the downside,
given a larger number of forecasts for core inflation are to the
above consensus. 
    "An in-line number would be disappointing for the dollar and
therefore we're negative on the release itself," Cole added.
    The Aussie  AUD=D3  was last marginally higher at $0.6436
while the New Zealand dollar  NZD=D3  fell 0.1% to $0.5915. 
    The onshore  CNY=CFXS  and offshore yuan  CNH=D3  both found
support near their one-week highs and last bought 7.2887 per
dollar and 7.3058 per dollar, respectively.
    The two had clocked their largest daily gain against the
dollar in about six months on Monday.
    Reuters reported that China's central bank was tightening
its scrutiny of bulk dollar purchases by domestic firms, at a
time when the yuan faces mounting depreciation pressure.
    In cryptocurrencies, bitcoin  BTC=BTSP  rose more than 2% to
$25,849, after falling below $25,000 for the first time in three
months on Monday. 

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World FX rates    https://tmsnrt.rs/2RBWI5E
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 (Reporting by Samuel Indyk and Rae Wee; Editing by Sam Holmes
and Ed Osmond)
 ((Samuel.Indyk@thomsonreuters.com))

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