The yen was set for its worst week in two-and-a-half years on Friday, as fears over the creeping spread of the coronavirus epidemic drove funds out of Asia and looking for safety in the US dollar, gold and bonds. Though it barely budged on Friday, the yen has lost 2% against the dollar in the previous two days, due to weak Japanese economic data and coronavirus worries. China reported an uptick in infections from a virus that has already killed more than 2,200 people there and paralysed its economy.
South Korea reported 52 new cases, lifting its national total by a third to 156. Japan has reported new deaths and, along with Singapore, stands on the brink of recession. "Market participants are getting anxious over the spread of COVID-19 in other countries now," said Johanna Chua, emerging markets Asia economist at Citi in Hong Kong.
"The risk sentiment in Asia deteriorated rapidly. The weakness was most felt in emerging markets Asia FX." China's tightly-managed yuan is sitting at a two-month low of 7.0286 per dollar. The Australian dollar traded at an 11-year low of $0.6603 and the kiwi at a four-month low of $0.6310. Both are heavily exposed to China via trade and have lost 6% since the start of the year. The tourism-exposed Thai baht has dropped 5.5% while the Korean won and Singapore dollar have shed more than 4%.
Against a basket of currencies, the dollar is sitting just below a three-year peak hit overnight. Yet amid the flight that pushed gold to a seven-year peak and US treasury 10-year yields below 1.5%, the yen merely nursed its losses at 112.00 per dollar.
"New cases in (South) Korea and in Japan, (have) obviously given some people a little bit of cold feet regarding Japan and the yen as a safe haven," said David Bloom, global head of FX at HSBC. "They're thinking: 'Maybe Swissy and gold are better'. So there is a little bit of scratching of heads, there's no doubt about it," he said, adding he was not yet prepared to abandon the idea of the yen as a safety play.
Meanwhile factory activity in Japan suffered its steepest contraction in seven years this month, data showed on Friday. Should European Purchasing Managers' Index data show similar softness, another round of dollar buying may be in the offing. "The US is simply less exposed to any slowdown in global trade, and in terms of currencies it's the obvious candidate in terms of relatively limited impact from coronavirus," said Westpac FX analyst Sean Callow.
"If European business takes fright at coronavirus concern, that could be a fresh cause of dollar buying across the board." The euro sank to a three-year low this week and last traded at $1.0790. The pound is a fraction firmer than an almost three-month low touched overnight at $1.2890.
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