Yen pinned near 40-year low with investors wary of intervention

(Reuters) – The yen hovered ​near a four-decade low on Tuesday, leaving traders wary of possible intervention by Japanese ‌authorities to bolster the currency, while the dollar steadied after recent losses.


The yen was up 0.1% at 161.88 per dollar, reversing some of its decline from earlier in the session, though it remained not far from a 162.84 ​trough hit last week.


Against the British pound , the Japanese currency fell to its lowest point ​since 2007 at 217.20, before paring some losses.


“There had been speculation at the end ⁠of last week that Japan could intervene again to support the yen during the U.S. holiday ​when trading conditions were less liquid, but no action has been taken, contributing to the yen giving ​back some of its recent gains,” said Lee Hardman, senior currency analyst at MUFG.


The yen found some support late last week as traders grew wary of a possible shift in Japan’s intervention strategy, though they said the currency’s sudden jump ​on Thursday was not indicative of official action.

FED HIKE BETS RECEDE
In the broader market, the dollar wobbled ​as investors continued to pare back expectations of U.S. rate hikes this year following an underwhelming jobs report that came ‌in ⁠far below expectations.


The euro dipped 0.1% to $1.1431, while sterling rose to a three-week high of $1.3401 before easing slightly.
Against a basket of currencies, the dollar was last at 100.91, up less than 0.1%.

Investors are now pricing in roughly 29 basis points worth of Federal Reserve rate hikes by December, down from about ​38 bps a week ​ago.
“I think current market ⁠pricing is probably a little bit underpriced…we still think that the FOMC will have to start tightening from December…markets are thinking that the rate-hiking cycle ​will start a little bit sooner than we expect, but the extent ​of the (hikes) is ⁠still below our expectations,” said Carol Kong, a currency strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia.

Focus now turns to the minutes of the Federal Open Market Committee’s (FOMC) June meeting on Wednesday for clues about the rate outlook.
“We ⁠know that (Chair ​Kevin) Warsh doesn’t like providing forward guidance, so I think ​the minutes tomorrow will probably be less informative than previous minutes,” Kong said.
In other currencies, the Australian dollar fell 0.2% to $0.6944.

Reporting ​by Rae Wee; Additional reporting by Harry Robertson; Editing by Jamie Freed, Jacqueline Wong and Thomas Derpinghaus

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