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The yen is choppy after BOJ's intervention fears

The yen fluctuated on Friday as traders were concerned that the Japanese authorities may intervene directly in markets to support their currency. Global stocks also held steady after U.S. president Donald Trump's softening stance?on Greenland.

In a statement earlier today, the Bank of Japan indicated its willingness to raise the still-low rates of borrowing in the face of an agitated political atmosphere and the upcoming snap elections.

Early in London trading the yen unexpectedly swung suddenly from a loss to an abrupt gain against the dollar. This caused traders to speculate that some Japanese authorities had run rate checks with the banks, which is often used as a signal to the markets to indicate their readiness to intervene in order to support a dollar-denominated currency at a 18-month low.

Two-year Japanese government bonds yields have risen to 1.25%, the highest since August 1996.

David Chao is the global market strategist at Invesco Singapore. He said that "the (BOJ) tone appears to be hawkish." The BOJ raised four out of six inflation forecasts, and said that if the forecasts come true, further rate increases are likely.

Global stocks recovered much of the ground they lost earlier in the week due to rising tensions between Europe and the United States over Greenland. This was after President Donald Trump announced that he wouldn't impose trade tariffs at this time and wouldn't occupy the territory with force.

European stock markets opened flat, with global stocks up 0.1%. Wall Street futures predicted a fall of 0.1-0.2%.

We know Trump is unpredictable. There are still some threats that we can face. "It's certain that Europeans remain very cautious in this environment," said Marie de Leyssac at Edmond de Rothschild Asset Management.

Some of the biggest investors in Northern Europe are becoming increasingly cautious about investing in U.S. assets.

"What it does absolutely is increase risk." "It makes us think about our cash levels, and our allocations of bonds and stocks," said Neil Birrell.

GOLD reaches another record high, Oil gains

The U.S. Dollar Index, which measures currency strength against a basket, was last broadly unchanged at 98.336, near its lowest levels for the year, after Thursday's biggest one-day drop in six weeks.

Last week, the dollar fell 0.2% against the yen to 158.02.

Fed?funds Futures indicate a 95% implied probability that the U.S. Federal Reserve is likely to keep rates at?hold during its next two-day meetings on January 28. This was little different from the day before, according CME Group’s FedWatch tool.

The yield on U.S. Treasury 10-year?bonds was last at 4,2351%.

Gold and other precious metals have set new records. Gold spot hit a record of $4,967.03 and then dropped 0.6% to $4 908.

Brent crude futures last rose 1.1% to $64.74 per barrel. This was after Trump's softening tone towards Greenland, and Iran helped ease fears about geopolitical risks disrupting the supply. Reporting by Iain Withers and Gregor Stuart Hunter, with additional reporting by Naomi Rovnick. Editing by Christian Schmollinger and Jacqueline Wong.

(source: Reuters)