Early trade in New York: dollar slips against yen

23 Sep, 2017

The dollar slipped against the yen on Friday, with tensions simmering on the Korean peninsula and as the boost from heightened expectations of a US interest rate hike in December faded. The dollar was down 0.39 percent at 112.02 yen, on pace to snap a five-day winning streak.
North Korea said on Friday it might test a hydrogen bomb over the Pacific Ocean after US President Donald Trump threatened to destroy the reclusive country, with leader Kim Jong Un promising to make a "mentally deranged" Trump pay dearly for his comments. "Increasing tensions with North Korea is putting a little bit of selling pressure on the dollar, especially against the Japanese yen," said Omer Esiner, chief market analyst at Commonwealth Foreign Exchange in Washington.
The yen tends to benefit during times of crisis due to Japan's net creditor nation status, and the expectation that Japanese investors would repatriate assets. "Keep in mind the yen is bouncing off of about a two-month low," Esiner said. The dollar scaled a two-month peak of 112.71 yen on Thursday after the Bank of Japan maintained its bond-buying pledge. The move also was spurred by the Federal Reserve's policy statement on Wednesday in which it signalled it still intended to raise rates in December.
The dollar index, which tracks the greenback against six major currencies, was down 0.25 percent to 92.03. Sterling slipped to a session low against the dollar before recovering a little after British Prime Minister Theresa May set out her plan for future ties with the European Union in a speech. Sterling was down 0.45 percent against the greenback at $1.3517, after falling as low as 1.349. "Theresa May's speech was, as expected, a bit opaque, thin of detail and offered no new fundamental direction," Neil Wilson, senior market analyst at ETX Capital in London, wrote in a note
The euro inched up 0.23 percent to $1.1966, with traders not seeing Sunday's German elections as a source of risk. Chancellor Angela Merkel is widely expected to win a fourth term in power.

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