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Yen up and dollar clinging on as China's Houston response awaited

Published 07/23/2020, 10:04 PM
Updated 07/23/2020, 10:10 PM
© Reuters. Illustration photo of Japan Yen and U.S. Dollar notes

By Tom Westbrook

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - The safe-haven yen advanced to a one-month high on Friday as deteriorating Sino-U.S. relations heightened investor anxiety, while a surging euro put the beleaguered dollar on track for its worst week in a month.

China has said it "must" retaliate after the U.S. ordered its Houston consulate to shut this week, amid allegations of spying. The editor of China's Global Times said on Twitter that Beijing will announce countermeasures on Friday and ask one U.S. consulate to close.

Earlier on Thursday U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Washington and its allies must use "more creative and assertive ways" to press the Chinese Communist Party to change its ways, calling it the "mission of our time."

While trading volumes were lightened by a public holiday in Japan, the palpable tensions were enough to rouse the yen from a range it has kept for weeks.

The yen

"The general concern is that any escalation in U.S-China tensions is bad and is putting the trade deal at risk," said Kim Mundy, an FX analyst at the Commonwealth Bank of Australia (OTC:CMWAY) in Sydney.

"If we see China retaliating today, our view is that Aussie and the other growth-linked commodity currencies can fall," she said, with a dip likely to shove the Aussie back in the 68 cent to 70 cent range it held for several weeks.

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The Australian dollar

The New Zealand dollar

The safe-haven Swiss franc

FAREWELL, CHENGDU?

Sino-U.S. ties have deteriorated over issues ranging from the novel coronavirus pandemic, which began in China, to Beijing trade and business practices, its territorial claims in the South China Sea and its clampdown on Hong Kong.

A tit-for-tat consulate closure is shaping as among the most likely Chinese reply to the Houston consulate eviction.

A source told Reuters on Wednesday that China was considering shutting the U.S. consulate in Wuhan.

The Chinese yuan, a barometer of Sino-U.S. relations, fell overnight after the South China Morning Post reported that the U.S. consulate in Chengdu may be shuttered.

The yuan

Elsewhere the tearaway euro (EUR=EBS) remained a tower of strength since busting through chart resistance in the afterglow of Europe's leaders agreeing on a coronavirus rescue package.

It has gained 1.6% this week, its best since late June, and 3.4% for the month so far to sit at $1.1615, just below a 21-month high hit overnight.

Sterling

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Besides China's next move, investors are looking to a slew of Purchasing Managers Index figures due across Europe and the U.S. later on Friday for a read on economic recovery progress.

Focus is also on the next U.S. fiscal rescue package, which is deadlocked in Congress while a month-end deadline looms as some unemployment benefits are due to expire.

"The concern is that a failure to get this away will impact consumer sentiment at a time when U.S. data is starting to miss the mark," said Chris Weston, head of research at Melbourne brokerage Pepperstone.

Latest comments

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