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Yen slumps to 32-year low against dollar

An electronic quotation board displays the yen's rate of 147 yen against the US dollar in Tokyo. -- AFP
An electronic quotation board displays the yen's rate of 147 yen against the US dollar in Tokyo. -- AFP
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LONDON/SINGAPORE: The dollar edged higher on Friday after dropping the previous day despite US inflation accelerating, helping it hit a 32-year peak against Japan's yen.


The dollar index was last up 0.35% to 112.97, having fallen 0.6% on Thursday as investors seemingly brushed off data that showed US consumer prices increased more than expected in September.


The greenback has been on a tear this year as the Federal Reserve has ramped up interest rates in an effort to tame inflation, pulling money back towards the United States. Fears about the global economy have also boosted the safe haven asset.


Yet, the stronger-than-expected inflation data on Thursday counter-intuitively triggered a rally in global stock markets and a fall in the dollar. Analysts suggested short-sellers reversing their positions seemed to have driven the bounce in equities, weighing on the dollar.


"Some of the detail perhaps wasn't as worrying as the particular core (inflation) print suggested, so when the market started to sell off, people began to cover very quickly," said James Malcolm, head of foreign exchange strategy at UBS.


But Japan's battered yen remained under pressure despite the brighter global mood.


The dollar rose to a new 32-year high of 147.785 yen on Friday, and was last up 0.34% to 147.705.


Last month, Japan intervened to buy yen for the first time since 1998. Investors remained on watch for further intervention after Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki on Thursday reiterated the government's readiness to take action against excessive currency volatility.


Masayuki Kichikawa, chief macro strategist at Sumitomo Mitsui Asset Management, said he thought the yen could still hit 150 per dollar in the near future.


"I don't think the Ministry of Finance is targeting any specific level or line in the sand," he said. "What they are saying is they are trying to prevent excessive volatility." -- Reuters


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