Investing.com– Most Asian currencies strengthened on Friday as positive economic readings from the U.S. and China helped soothe concerns over a recession, although improved risk appetite put renewed pressure on the Japanese yen.
found some strength on better-than-expected labor market data, although any major advances in the greenback were quelled by persistent bets on interest rate cuts.
A risk-on rally in stock markets also helped inspire some confidence in regional markets.
Chinese yuan firms as inflation picks up
The Chinese yuan strengthened on Friday, with the pair falling 0.1% after a stronger-than-expected midpoint fix by the People’s Bank.
The yuan was also buoyed by data showing Chinese inflation grew more than expected in July, while inflation fell slightly less than expected.
The data indicated that recent interest rate cuts in China were helping spruce up some consumer spending and prices, although lower rates bode poorly for the yuan in the long run.
Traders were also cautious over whether Friday’s reading indicated a trend, given that despite some strength in July, Chinese disinflation still remained in play.
Japanese yen under pressure as risk sentiment improves
The Japanese yen steadied on Friday, but was nursing steep declines in recent sessions following some less hawkish signals from the Bank of Japan, and as improving sentiment also sapped the currency of safe haven demand.
The pair fell slightly to 147.22 yen, but was trading well above lows of around 141.6 yen hit earlier in the week.
The yen’s turnabout came as BOJ officials said they would not hike interest rates during market volatility, tempering a hawkish message from the central bank during an end-July meeting.
But despite weakening this week, the yen was still sitting on stellar gains against the dollar over the past month, especially as the global carry trade began to unwind.
Dollar steady, CPI data awaited
The and both steadied in Asian trade after seeing mild strength in overnight trade.
Better-than-expected data helped spur bets that the labor market was not slowing as drastically as payrolls data last week had suggested.
But despite the positive data, traders largely maintained their bets for an interest rate cut in September, although they did trim expectations for a 50 basis point reduction, showed.
Broader Asian currencies advanced as sentiment improved. The rate-sensitive South Korean won’s pair slid 0.7%, while the Singapore dollar’s pair fell 0.2% in holiday trade.
The Australian dollar’s pair added 0.1%, extending gains after hawkish signals from the Reserve Bank boosted the currency.
The Indian rupee’s pair pulled back from record highs, albeit barely, after the Reserve Bank of India struck a somewhat hawkish tone and also slightly trimmed its growth forecast for the current quarter.