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اردو
Dollar Steady As Yen Tests Lows
خلاصہ۔:The U.S. dollar stabilized in narrow trading as traders await Federal Reserve meeting notes, while the Japanese yen remains under pressure near 1986 lows despite positive domestic wage and spending data. Meanwhile, crude oil prices faced mixed drivers from Middle East shipping tensions and an OPEC production increase.

Asian currency pairs traded in narrow ranges early this week as the U.S. dollar stabilized following recent labor data weakness. The Japanese yen remains a main focus for foreign exchange markets, trading near historic lows despite signs of domestic wage and spending growth. These market moves show that traders are waiting for clearer central bank interest rate signals before committing to new positions.
Yen Hovers Near 1986 Lows
The U.S. dollar is currently trading in the high 161 yen range, keeping the Japanese currency close to levels last seen in 1986. Japan reported that household spending rose 3.7% in May, beating expectations, while wage income grew for a fifth consecutive month. Despite this domestic data supporting the Bank of Japan's recent 25-basis-point interest rate increase, the yen received only limited support. Market participants remain on alert for potential currency intervention from Tokyo to address the extended weakness.
US Dollar Awaits Fed Minutes
The greenback held steady in Asian trade after suffering steep losses late last week due to soft nonfarm payroll reports. While markets have scaled back expectations for near-term rate hikes, sticky inflation continues to support dollar holdings. Currency traders are now looking toward the release of the Federal Reserve's June meeting minutes under Chair Kevin Warsh to gauge how policymakers interpret current economic constraints.
Mixed Drivers for Crude Oil
Crude oil experienced conflicting supply signals, with West Texas Intermediate eventually ticking lower to $68.54 per barrel. Initial reports of vessel strikes in the Strait of Hormuz provided early upward pressure on prices. However, the market retreated as tanker traffic across the waterway gradually normalized and the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries finalized an agreement to increase production output.
Regional Asian Currencies Subdued
Broader regional currencies showed limited movement against the greenback. The Australian dollar is trading at $0.695 against the U.S. dollar amid weakness in resource equities. The South Korean won fell 0.4% alongside heavy selling in local stock markets, while the Chinese yuan, Singapore dollar, and Indian rupee remained largely unchanged.
What Is Driving It
The current foreign exchange action is driven by central bank policy gaps and positioning ahead of U.S. Federal Reserve communications. In Japan, improving domestic economic reports are failing to bridge the severe yield difference between the yen and the U.S. dollar. In energy markets, crude oil prices are reacting directly to the tension between immediate Middle East shipping interruptions and planned OPEC supply increases.
Why It Matters
These developments show that major currency pairs are caught in a tight holding pattern while waiting for definitive interest rate shifts. With the U.S. dollar retaining its footing and the yen pinned at decades-long lows, foreign exchange market direction depends entirely on incoming U.S. monetary policy cues rather than regional economic data.


ڈس کلیمر:
یہ مضمون صرف مصنف کی ذاتی رائے پر مبنی ہے، یہ پلیٹ فارم کی سرمایہ کاری کی مشورہ نہیں ہے۔ پلیٹ فارم مضمون کی معلومات کی درستگی، مکملیت اور بروقت ہونے کی کوئی ضمانت نہیں دیتا، اور مضمون کی معلومات پر اعتماد یا استعمال سے ہونے والے کسی بھی نقصان کی ذمہ داری قبول نہیں کرتا۔
