The Japanese yen fell in Asian trade on Tuesday against a basket of major rivals, resuming losses against the dollar after a short hiatus yesterday and moving once again towards two-week lows amid ongoing Japan-US trade negotiations.
The Bank of Japan will convene tomorrow to discuss the monetary policies, widely expected to hold interest rates unchanged while providing some clues on the future of policy normalization this year.
The Price
The USD/JPY rose 0.4% today to 142.49, with a session-low at 141.95.
The yen rose 1.2% on Monday against the dollar, recovering from a two-week trough at 144.03.
The yen also rebounded on haven demand amid uncertainty about the US-China trade negotiations.
Trade Talks
Asian countries such as Japan and South Korea are expected to seek temporary trade deals to avoid the return of strict US reciprocal tariffs in early July.
US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the Trump administration is working on making trade deals with 17 trade partners, excepting China.
He reasserted the administration’s position that economic pressure will force China to the negotiation table, as they couldn’t handle 145% US tariffs.
US President Donald Trump said his team is very close to making a trade deal with Japan, however, Japan’s officials dismissed reports about talks to fix or change the forex rate between the yen and the dollar.
BOJ
The Bank of Japan is convening this week to discuss the monetary policies, expected to hold interest rates flat at 0.5%, the highest since 2008.
The BOJ will discuss the impact of the US trade war on the exports-reliant Japanese economy, which could determine the pace of rate hikes in the near future.
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Both the Dow Jones and S&P 500 managed to close higher on Monday for the fifth straight session, marking the longest winning streak in 2025, while NASDAQ closed higher as markets analyze latest corporate earnings results.
US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent called on China to calm trade tensions, and said the responsibility falls on China for reaching a trade deal.
Bessent said in a CNBC interview that China should move to calm the trade tensions as they sell to the US five times what the US sells to them.
He once again said the reciprocal tariffs between Washington and Beijing are not sustainable, pointing to the progress on trade negotiations between the Trump administration and many other countries, including India.
This week, many major tech corporations, such as Apple, Meta, Microsoft, and Amazon, will release the quarterly results, while investors also await the pivotal US payrolls report on Friday.
At the close, Dow Jones rose 0.3%, or 114 points to 40,227 points, with a session-high at 40,414 points, and a low at 39,869 points.
S&P 500 rose 0.1%, or 3 points to 5528 points, with a session-high at 5553 points.
NASDAQ slipped 0.1%, or 17 points to 17,366 points, with a session-low at 17,128 points.
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Oil prices fell on Monday amid concerns about the impact of the global trade war on oil demand, and especially in China and the US.
PVM analysts told Reuters that the trade war between the US and China still dominates investor sentiment and is still the biggest mover for oil prices.
He added that other factors, such as US-Iran nuclear talks and OPEC+ production plans are also impacting prices, but by a smaller degree than trade concerns.
Otherwise, Reuters reported that oil tankers are lining up near an old port in western Venezuela to load shipments before the expiry of the US shipping license to local and international companies by the end of May.
On trading, Brent July futures fell 1.5%, or $1.01 to $65.86 a barrel.
US crude futures due in June fell 1.54%, or 97 cents to $62.05 a barrel.
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Ripple rose on Monday alongside most cryptocurrencies as the trade war concerns receded following positive remarks from Chinese and US officials.
US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent called on China to calm trade tensions, and said the responsibility falls on China for reaching a trade deal.
Bessent said in a CNBC interview that China should move to calm the trade tensions as they sell to the US five times what the US sells to them.
He once again said the reciprocal tariffs between Washington and Beijing are not sustainable, pointing to the progress on trade negotiations between the Trump administration and many other countries, including India.
Trump admitted last week that current tariffs on India are too high, and won’t stay this way, and will decline but won’t reach zero.
He also calmed the markets by asserting that he doesn’t intend to sack Fed Chair Jerome Powell.
Ripple
On trading, ripple rose 1.9% as of 20:34 GMT to $2.29.
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