Friday, December 5, 2025

Weak pound and yen shore up dollar, bonds and payrolls in focus

By Alden Bentley and Jaspreet Kalra

NEW YORK/MUMBAI (Reuters) -Sterling and the Japanese yen slumped on Tuesday on growing investor anxiety about government finances, allowing the dollar to claw back some ground, while traders looked toward Friday’s U.S. jobs report for signals on the greenback’s next turn.

Renewed pressure on bond markets, with Britain’s 30-year borrowing costs rising to their highest levels since 1998, spilled over into currency markets, while gold hit fresh record highs.

“Negative developments outside of the U.S. are probably what’s driving the market today, in terms of dollar strength,” said Vassili Serebriakov, FX strategist at UBS in New York.

U.S. payrolls data to be released on Friday is likely to determine the path of the dollar in coming weeks, he added.

Sterling fell to a 3-1/2 week low and was 1.24% lower in afternoon trade at $1.3375. The dollar strengthened 0.84% to 148.40 yen, hitting its highest against the Japanese currency since August 1.

The euro fell 0.61% to $1.1637.

While worries about fiscal issues overseas were the main drivers when U.S. markets reopened after the Labor Day holiday, markets also keyed in on late Friday’s U.S. appeals court ruling that most of President Donald Trump’s tariffs are illegal. The divided court allowed for the tariffs to remain until October 14, to give the administration a chance to file an appeal with the Supreme Court.

Also, the return of the U.S. Congress on Tuesday leaves less than a month to pass legislation that would keep federal agencies funded and avert a partial government shutdown.

The midmorning release of a slightly weaker-than-expected ISM manufacturing PMI did not elicit much response in the forex market, with Friday’s August non-farm payrolls the main focus of the week.

While sterling was weighed down by lingering worries over Britain’s fiscal position ahead of a budget later this year, dovish-leaning remarks from a Bank of Japan official and the resignation of a key ruling party official pulled down the yen.

“Sterling’s underperformance is reflecting the growing concerns over the fiscal situation as we move closer to the budget and it becomes a bigger focus for market participants,” said Lee Hardman, senior currency analyst at MUFG.

Finance minister Rachel Reeves is expected to raise taxes in her autumn budget in order to remain on course for her fiscal targets, potentially adding to the challenge of boosting growth.

For the Japanese yen, heightened political uncertainty was likely to remain a drag, while the lack of a hawkish policy signal from Deputy Governor Ryozo Himino on Tuesday would encourage speculators to continue rebuilding short yen positions, Hardman said.

Source link

Hot this week

Senate Republicans call for stricter Afghan vetting after Guard shooting

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! ...

Cloudflare apologises after latest outage takes down LinkedIn and Zoom | Internet

Cloudflare has apologised after an outage on Friday...

HPE Announces Sale of Its Remaining H3C Stake for $643 Million

Hewlett-Packard Enterprise Company (NYSE:HPE) is one...

Issa caught on hot mic discussing GOP moves after CA map

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! ...

Elon Musk’s X fined €120m by EU in first clash under new digital laws | Elon Musk

Elon Musk’s social media platform, X, has been...

Topics

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_img