The latest Market Talks covering FX and Fixed Income. Published exclusively on Dow Jones Newswires throughout the day.
0302 GMT - The yen's move past 162 to the dollar raises intervention risks, with the level seen as the line where officials could step in, Maybank analysts say. So far, there is no clarity on if intervention is going to occur or occurring, but there has been continued jawboning from officials, they write in a note. Maybank stays alert for the sharp moves that can be associated with intervention, noting ample ammunition in deposits and securities far eclipsing the last round of intervention that cost an estimated $74 billion. "At this point, we watch if the pair can hold above the 162.00 mark for the near term with the next resistance at 164.00." Maybank pegs support at 158.00 and 155.00. Yen last at 162.14. (fabiana.negrinochoa@wsj.com)
0258 GMT - The Singapore dollar weakens slightly against its U.S. counterpart in the Asian session amid mixed signals over expected U.S.-Iran talks. On the one hand, President Trump said that the "peace talks were due to resume Tuesday in Doha," Maybank analysts say in a FX Research & Strategy report. On the other hand, however, Iran "ruled out negotiations 'at any level' with the U.S.," the analysts say. "Sentiment remains tentative," they add. The U.S. dollar is 0.1% higher at 1.2935 Singapore dollars, LSEG data show. (ronnie.harui@wsj.com)
0228 GMT - The primary driver of the yen's weakness is fundamental issues on the Japanese side, such as a widening digital services deficit, as well as expanding foreign investments by domestic individuals and companies, says Shota Ryu, a strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities. Speculators have built up huge bets against the yen in the futures market, indicating that trading has become overheated, Ryu says. This would justify Tokyo's intervention to prop up the yen, he adds. Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama said Tuesday the government stands ready to take "decisive" action in the currency market as needed.(megumi.fujikawa@wsj.com)
0227 GMT - The Malaysian ringgit is expected to remain under pressure in the near term as a stronger U.S. dollar and global economic uncertainty continue to weigh on emerging-market currencies, MBSB Research says in a note. It expects safe-haven demand for the dollar and higher U.S. interest rates to keep downward pressure on the Malaysian currency. Still, the Southeast Asian country's resilient economic growth, healthy foreign direct investment inflows, strong exports and a wider trade surplus should help limit the local currency's further weakness, MBSB Research adds. It expects the dollar to average around 4.01 ringgit in 2026, compared with 3.92 ringgit previously forecast. The dollar is 0.3% lower at 4.0580 ringgit. (yingxian.wong@wsj.com)
0203 GMT - The yen weakens against most other G-10 and Asian currencies amid concerns over the Japanese government's possible pushback against Bank of Japan rate increases. A media report says the "draft of [Japan] PM Takaichi's basic policy guidelines is expected to show BOJ working closely with the government to confirm a positive cycle of wages and prices and sustainability," MUFG Bank's Michael Wan notes. This has spurred worries over the extent of potential government pushback against BOJ rate hikes, the senior currency analyst says in a research report. The dollar is 0.1% higher at 162.17 yen after earlier touching 162.40 yen, highest intraday level since 1986, FactSet data show. The Singapore dollar is 0.1% higher at 125.36 yen. (ronnie.harui@wsj.com)
0151 GMT - Malaysia's economic growth is likely to moderate in 2H as higher costs, trade uncertainty and geopolitical tensions weigh on business activity and consumer spending, MBSB Research says in a note. However, private consumption could continue to drive growth, backed by a healthy labor market, wage growth, government support and tourism spending, it says. Exports and investment should also stay supportive, helped by technology demand and infrastructure projects, it reckons. MBSB Research raises Malaysia's 2026 economic growth forecast to 4.5% from 4.2%, supported by stronger-than-expected 1H performance and resilient domestic demand. It also raises 2026 inflation estimate to 2.0% from 1.8%, citing elevated global oil prices. MBSB expects Bank Negara Malaysia to keep its policy rate at 2.75% through year-end, given steady domestic growth dynamics and well-contained inflation. (yingxian.wong@wsj.com)
0133 GMT - Japan's Ministry of Finance vigilance against speculative bearish yen bets warns of intervention risks as 162 versus the dollar is breached, says Vishnu Varathan, managing director and head of macro strategy, APAC at Mizuho Securities. The yen weakened to a fresh 40-year low against the dollar early Tuesday as it broke above 162. Japan Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama said the government stands ready to take appropriate action in the FX market that could be "decisive." Varathan says marginal yen bears should be braced for intervention to extract a price. (venkat.pr@wsj.com)
0012 GMT - Japanese stocks are higher in early trade following a U.S. tech stock rally overnight. Electronics and metals stocks are leading the gains. Keyence is up 4.1% and Fujikura is 5.1% higher. The dollar is at 161.94 yen, compared with Y161.84 as of Monday's Tokyo stock market close. Investors are closely watching U.S.-Iran peace talks and any comments on the yen's recent decline by Japanese government officials. The Nikkei Stock Average is up 1.4% at 70448.33. (kosaku.narioka@wsj.com; @kosakunarioka)
0012 GMT - JGB futures edge lower in the early Tokyo session, weighed by the yen's depreciation which tends to boost import prices and inflationary pressures in Japan. This, in turn, could lead to further BOJ rate increases. Meanwhile, investors may also focus on Japanese Finance Ministry's auction today of about 2.8 trillion yen of two-year sovereign notes. "We expect the 2y auction to clear smoothly," SMBC Nikko Securities' Lisa Mochizuki says in a research report. "2y yields look fair," the junior analyst adds. Benchmark 10-year JGB futures are 0.08 yen lower at 127.96 yen. (ronnie.harui@wsj.com)
2345 GMT - Japanese stocks may rise following a rally in U.S. tech shares overnight. Nikkei futures are up 1.2% at 70520 on the SGX. The dollar is at 161.92 yen, compared with Y161.84 as of Monday's Tokyo stock market close. Investors are focusing on U.S.-Iran peace talks and any comments on the yen's recent depreciation by Japanese government officials. The Nikkei Stock Average rose 0.2% to 69468.11 on Monday. (kosaku.narioka@wsj.com)
2037 GMT - The U.S. Supreme Court ruling that President Trump can't fire Fed officials is a double-edged sword for Chairman Warsh, JPMorgan's Michael Feroli writes. He says the decision "is mostly a win" for him, "for the simple reason that now Trump can't fire Warsh." It also means that Warsh will need to convince, rather than coerce, his colleagues to back his agenda for the central bank. The court decision keeps Governor Cook on the job. Feroli adds that the ruling stops short of equating central bank independence with monetary policy independence, a question that could be revisited by future courts, he says. (paulo.trevisani@wsj.com; @ptrevisani)
2031 GMT - Bitcoin is trading above $60k today, but some analysts are bracing for another possible downturn that could take bitcoin as low as into the $40k range - which if accurate would be the lowest bitcoin has traded at since early 2024, when bitcoin was on its way up to a then-record high of around $72,000, according to data from Coinglass. In a note, analysts with Bitfinex say that $53,400 is now the "key support level" to watch - and if that's breached, then bitcoin could briefly dive into $40k territory. That's because, in part, ETF money continues to flee bitcoin, says Bitfinex. "This move reflects a structural exodus in the spot markets," says the firm. Bitcoin is currently up 1.2% to $60,288, according to data from LSEG. (kirk.maltais@wsj.com)
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
June 29, 2026 23:02 ET (03:02 GMT)
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