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Yen moves in a negative zone with eyes fixed on trade developments

Economies.com
2025-06-04 03:44AM UTC

The Japanese yen fell in Asian trade on Wednesday against a basket of major rivals, extending losses for the second straight session against the US dollar amid a weak sentiment in the market as traders await the results of US President Trump’s negotiations with trade partners, including China. 

 

Recent Tokyo data showed increasing inflationary pressures on the Bank of Japan, which boosted the odds of a June interest rate hike by the Bank of Japan.

 

The Price

 

The USD/JPY price rose over 0.2% today to 144.29 yen per dollar, with a session-low at 143.67.

 

The yen lost 0.95% on Tuesday, the first loss in four days as the US attempted to calm trade tensions with China, and after strong US job opportunities data.

 

Trade Developments

 

The Trump administration specified Wednesday as the deadline for best offers by other countries on the trade deals, and it’s the same day that the US implemented 50% tariffs on steel and aluminum. 

 

The White House also expects Trump to conduct a phone call with his Chinese counterpart this week after both sides traded accusations of violating the Geneva trade agreement. 

 

US Dollar

 

The dollar index rose 0.1% on Wednesday against a basket of major rivals.

 

Recent US data showcased the strength of the labor market unexpectedly, with the Fed relying on such data to decide the path ahead for monetary policies. 

 

Japanese Rates

 

Earlier data showed consumer prices in Tokyo rose 3.6% y/y in May, the fastest pace since January 2023, and up from 3.4% in April.

 

Following the data, the odds of a BOJ 0.25% interest rate hike in June rose from 35% to 45%.

 

Bank of Japan Deputy Governor Shinichi Uchida said the bank will continue to raise interest rates if the economy recovers from the negative impact of US tariffs, however he still cautioned that the economic outlook remains highly uncertain.

 

Now traders await more Japanese data on inflation, unemployment, and wages to gather additional clues.

Ethereum climbs and shrugs off trade war concerns, geopolitical tensions

Economies.com
2025-06-03 20:35PM UTC

Ethereum rose on Tuesday amid a mixed risk appetite in the market, as the US economic growth outlook was hurt due to the trade war. 

 

The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development reduced its US GDP growth forecast to 1.6% in 2025, down from 2.2% in previous forecasts, and for growth to slow even further in 2026 to 1.5%.

 

Earlier US data showed job opportunities rose to 7.39 million in April from 7.2 in March, while analysts expected 7.11 million. 

 

Otherwise, White House Spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said US President Donald Trump will sign an executive order today to double tariffs on steel and aluminium imports from 25% to 50%. 

 

Ethereum

 

Ethereum rose 2.3% as of 21:34 GMT on Coinmarketcap to $2601.1.

US dollar climbs amid mounting trade war concerns

Economies.com
2025-06-03 19:59PM UTC

The dollar rose against most major rivals on Tuesday as markets closely assess the ongoing US-China trade war. 

 

The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development reduced its US GDP growth forecast to 1.6% in 2025, down from 2.2% in previous forecasts, and for growth to slow even further in 2026 to 1.5%.

 

Earlier US data showed job opportunities rose to 7.39 million in April from 7.2 in March, while analysts expected 7.11 million. 

 

Otherwise, White House Spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said US President Donald Trump will sign an executive order today to double tariffs on steel and aluminium imports from 25% to 50%. 

 

The dollar index rose 0.6% as of 20:35 GMT to 99.2, with a session-high at 99.3, and a low at 98.5.

 

Loonie

 

The Canadian dollar fell 0.1% against its US counterpart as of 20:57 GMT to $0.7288.

 

Aussie

 

The Australian dollar fell 0.5% against the US dollar to $0.6462.

Gold backs off four-week high

Economies.com
2025-06-03 19:48PM UTC

Gold prices fell on Tuesday as the dollar rose against most major rivals while traders assess the trade war. 

 

The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development reduced its US GDP growth forecast to 1.6% in 2025, down from 2.2% in previous forecasts, and for growth to slow even further in 2026 to 1.5%.

 

Earlier US data showed job opportunities rose to 7.39 million in April from 7.2 in March, while analysts expected 7.11 million. 

 

Otherwise, White House Spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said US President Donald Trump will sign an executive order today to double tariffs on steel and aluminium imports from 25% to 50%. 

 

Separately, the dollar index rose 0.6% as of 20:35 GMT to 99.2, with a session-high at 99.3, and a low at 98.5.

 

On trading, gold spot prices rose 0.6% as of 20:36 GMT to $3377.8 an ounce.