investingLive Asia-Pacific FX news wrap: Asia markets climb. Japan CPI hits four-year low

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Summary:

  • Iran war newsflow was subdued; talks between Tehran and Washington are continuing via Pakistani intermediaries, focused on establishing a framework for a potential agreement
  • Japan’s core CPI rose 1.4% year-on-year in April, a four-year low and below the 1.7% consensus; the core-core measure, which strips out fresh food and energy and is closely watched by the BOJ, slowed to 1.9% from 2.4% in March, its weakest since July 2024
  • Asian equities traded mostly higher, drawing support from a solid Wall Street handover and cautious optimism around Iran developments
  • The Nikkei gained more than 2%; mainland Chinese equities lagged at +0.2% while Hong Kong moved more constructively at +0.8%
  • Major FX pairs remained rangebound through the session
  • Looking ahead: US President Trump hosts the swearing-in ceremony for Kevin Warsh as Federal Reserve Chair at 1100 ET (1500 GMT) at the White House, and speaks later at Rockland Community College at 1500 ET (1900 GMT); US markets are closed Monday for Memorial Day

Asian markets closed mostly higher on Friday in a session that lacked drama on the geopolitical front but delivered one of the more notable data points of the week, with Japan’s core inflation falling to its slowest pace in four years and prompting fresh debate about the Bank of Japan’s path ahead.

Iran war newsflow was subdued through the Asian day. Talks between Washington and Tehran are understood to be continuing via Pakistani intermediaries, with the exchanges centred on establishing a framework that could eventually support a formal agreement. The absence of any escalation was enough to sustain the cautious optimism that has been underpinning risk sentiment across the region in recent sessions.

The Nikkei was the standout performer, gaining more than 2 percent, a move that reflected the broader positive tone rather than any enthusiasm about the Japanese inflation data. Core consumer prices rose just 1.4 percent year-on-year in April, well below the 1.7 percent consensus and the weakest reading since March 2022. The core-core index, which strips out both fresh food and energy and serves as the BOJ’s preferred gauge of demand-driven inflation, slowed to 1.9 percent from 2.4 percent in March, its softest level since July 2024. Government subsidies on energy and education were the primary drivers of the miss rather than any genuine underlying disinflation, and analysts broadly maintained their calls for a BOJ rate hike in June regardless.

Mainland Chinese equities lagged the regional advance, gaining just 0.2 percent, while Hong Kong moved more meaningfully at 0.8 percent. Major currency pairs held narrow ranges through the session, with traders appearing reluctant to take on fresh directional exposure ahead of the US Memorial Day long weekend, which will keep New York markets closed on Monday.

The weekend kicks off after President Trump hosts the swearing-in ceremony for Kevin Warsh as Federal Reserve Chair at the White House at 1100 Eastern Time. Trump is also due to speak later in the day at Rockland Community College at 1500 Eastern Time.

This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.

最近のFX関連情報ニュース

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