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Yen surges on thought intervention, Asia shares increase

The yen jumped sharply versus its peers on Monday after it slid past 160 per dollar previously in the session, causing speculation that Tokyo might have actually intervened in the currency market while the country was out for a holiday.

The Japanese currency enhanced about 2% from the initial 159 per dollar level in a matter of a few minutes during Asia hours, as some traders stated selling of dollars was seen onshore.

The fast move came simply a few hours after the yen toppled to the weaker side of 160 per dollar for the very first time in 34-years.

The move has all the trademarks of an actual BOJ intervention and what much better time to do it than on a Japanese public vacation which indicates lower liquidity in USD/JPY and more bang for the BOJ's buck, said Tony Sycamore, a market expert at IG.

The yen was last 1.7% firmer at 155.73 per dollar, having strike an intra-day high of 155.01 versus the dollar.

It likewise rose more than 1% versus other significant currencies such as the euro, sterling and the Australian dollar.

In the broader market, Asian stocks left to a favorable begin ahead of the Federal Reserve's policy conference later on in the week, assisted by a rally in shares of Chinese property business.

The upbeat sentiment in equities looked set to continue into Europe, with EUROSTOXX 50 futures up 0.36% while FTSE futures included 0.52%.

Hong Kong and China shares acquired on the back of speculation that more stimulus steps are most likely to be unveiled today aimed at clearing inventory and raising home purchase constraints to increase sales.

Hong Kong's Hang Seng Mainland Properties Index jumped 4.3% while mainland China's CSI 300 Property Index surged more than 7%.

That helped to raise the broader Hang Seng Index up 0.9%. China's blue-chip index also relocated action and jumped 1.3%, while MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan added 0.9%.

Nasdaq futures increased 0.4%, while S&P 500 futures gotten 0.28%.

Still, the Fed's two-day monetary policy meeting beginning Tuesday takes centre phase for the week, where expectations are for the reserve bank to keep rates on hold.

Focus, nevertheless, will be on any guidance for the central bank's rate outlook, after duplicated runs of stronger-than-expected U.S. financial data and still-sticky inflationary pressures derailed market bets on how soon the Fed might begin its rate easing cycle.

Market prices reveals a first Fed rate cut is expected in September, from a June start just a couple of weeks back, with just over 30 basis points worth of relieving anticipated this year.

We've seen rather a considerable repricing of rate expectations in the U.S., and that's sort of a criteria for international rate of interest, said Jarrod Kerr, primary economic expert at Kiwibank.

I think the Fed this week will type of echo those remarks that rate cuts aren't as close as they had actually hoped.

The prospect that U.S. rates would stay in restrictive territory for longer have propped up the greenback, though it was broadly on the back foot on Monday.

Versus the dollar, the euro rose 0.34% to $ 1.0729, while sterling acquired 0.38% to $1.2542

The dollar index fell 0.34% to 105.60, though was headed for a regular monthly gain of 1%.

In products, Brent fell 0.9% to $88.70 a barrel, while U.S. crude similarly edged 0.8% lower to $83.17 per barrel, as news of a potential Gaza ceasefire also alleviated worries of supply restraints.

A Hamas delegation will go to Cairo on Monday for talks aimed at securing a ceasefire, a Hamas official told on Sunday, as conciliators stepped up efforts to reach a deal ahead of an expected Israeli assault on the southern city of Rafah.

Gold dipped 0.2% to $2,333.30 an ounce.

(source: Reuters)