The Australian and New Zealand dollars stumbled to multi-week lows against the Japanese yen on Tuesday, as escalating tensions over North Korea pushed investors to safe harbours. North Korea fired a missile that passed over northern Japan, the latest act of provocation by Pyongyang that has ramped up tensions in the region over the past month. That has forced funds to pare back riskier positions in carry trades which typically favour the higher-yielding Antipodeans.
The Australian dollar sank 0.9 percent to 86.20 yen, the lowest since August 11. Against the Swiss franc, the Aussie hit a one-month trough. The New Zealand dollar lost 0.8 percent to 78.65 yen, a level not seen since May 30. Against the US dollar, the Aussie slipped to $0.7926 from the previous session's $0.7973. The Aussie has found support around 79 cents after hitting stiff chart resistance at a two-year peak of $0.8066 in late-July.
New Zealand government bonds rose, sending the yield about 4 basis points lower at the long-end of the curve. Australian government bond futures climbed, with the three-year bond contract up 4 ticks at 98.030. The 10-year contract also added 4 ticks to 97.380. Japan is the world's biggest creditor nation and there is an assumption that investors there will repatriate funds at times of crisis.
North Korea fired a missile early on Tuesday that flew over Japan and landed in the Pacific waters off the northern region of Hokkaido. The United States, Japan and South Korea considered that launch to have been a ballistic missile test while North Korea said it was a rocket carrying a communications satellite into orbit.
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