- US weekly jobless claims drop to lowest levels since February
- Apple shares slide as China's crackdown on iPhone use grows; Losing over $200 billion in market value
- BOJ's Nakagawa reiterates stance that BOJ and gov't are monitoring FX rates and impact on economy
The US dollar index hit its highest level since March as risk aversion runs wild on higher interest rate fears and as global growth concerns spread to the US. The dollar is poised to have an eight straight week of gains, but that is somewhat capped against the Japanese yen. US stocks are falling on concerns that the Fed might not be done tightening and over uncertainty over how far China’s iPhone ban will extend into other parts of American technology. Also weighing on sentiment is the global growth story that remains uninspiring following slightly better-than-expected China trade data and as fears grow for German industrial output. For the US economy, the labor market is not softening quickly enough and that makes the Fed stick to the hawkish script that they might not be done raising rates.
The yen got a minor boost after BOJ Nakagawa stated that the central bank will closely coordinate with the government in monitoring foreign exchange rates and paying due attention to any impacts on the economy. Japanese officials will remain consistent with this messaging, but markets won't react that much unless we significantly more yen weakness.
Apple
The Nasdaq is sinking as one bad Apple spoils a bunch of mega-cap tech stocks. Apple’s growth story is heavily reliant on China and if the Beijing crackdown intensifies that could pose a big problem to the bunch of other mega-cap tech companies that rely on China.
USD/JPY Daily Chart
Earlier verbal intervention might have helped stall the dollar's rally against the yen, but this latest pressure on tech stocks is significantly weighing on sentiment, which could help keep the yen supported. Japan officials are getting unexpected support from a bad Apple outlook, which help support a dollar-yen dip back to the lows seen earlier in the month. The dollar temporarily surged after jobless claims fell to the lowest levels since February, but some are expecting that to influenced by the impact of Hurricane Idalia.
The key levels for dollar-yen remain 145.80 and 148.00, with volatility expected to remain elevated given a breach of either the 145 or 150 levels. If the broader dollar strengthening cycle remains that will eventually tip the scales of the massive divergence in central bank policy. One more Fed rate hike getting fully priced in might not be enough to get USD/JPY back to last October's high, so you might start to see some bearish positioning.
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