
Yen firms after election even as uncertainty beckons
Japanese markets were closed for a public holiday, leaving the yen as the indicator of possible investor angst.
The currency , however, firmed as much as 0.7% to 147.74 per dollar, but stayed close to the 3-1/2-month low of 149.19 hit last week as investors fretted about Japan's political and fiscal outlook.
It was last at 148.09 yen per dollar and also nudged higher against the euro to 172.40 and against sterling to 199.03.
Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's Liberal Democratic Party returned 47 seats, short of the 50 it needed to ensure a majority in the 248-seat upper chamber in an election where half the seats were up for grabs.
While the ballot does not directly determine whether Ishiba's administration will fall, it heaps political pressure on the embattled leader who also lost control of the more powerful lower house in October.
Ishiba, though, vowed to stay on in his role even as some of his own party discussed his future and the opposition weighed a no-confidence motion.
Carol Kong, currency strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia, said markets likely priced in a much worse outcome for the ruling coalition heading into the election and doubted that the yen could sustain its strength.
"It remains unclear whether Ishiba can indeed survive as the prime minister... and what it means for Japan's trade negotiations with the U.S.," said Kong.
"Prolonged political uncertainty will be negative for Japanese assets, including the yen."
The election result, while not entirely a shock to markets, also comes at a tricky time for a country trying to get a tariff deal with U.S. President Donald Trump before an August 1 deadline.
"The modest recovery the yen is showing this morning seems to be a "sell the fact" reaction and might prove short-lived," said Roberto Mialich, global FX strategist at UniCredit.
"Japan's political picture has become more complicated, with investors also focusing on the U.S.-Japan tariff row."
The increased political fragility is likely to constrain the Bank of Japan's ability to tighten monetary policy in the near term, said David Chao, global market strategist for Asia Pacific at Invesco. "It may be reluctant to add further pressure to an already volatile landscape."
Investor focus has been firmly on Trump's global tariff salvos, with a Financial Times report last week indicating the U.S. president was pushing for steep new tariffs on European Union products.
U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said on Sunday he was confident the U.S. can secure a trade deal with the EU, but said August 1 was a hard deadline for tariffs to kick in.
The euro was up 0.1% at $1.1642, while sterling last fetched $1.3442. The dollar index , which measures the U.S. currency against six others, was down 0.1% at 98.29.
The European Central Bank is due to meet this week and is expected to hold rates steady after a string of cuts, while investor attention has been on whether the Federal Reserve succumbs to pressure from Trump to cut interest rates.
"We doubt ECB President Christine Lagarde will shake things up too much ahead of the central bank's summer break, although there may be some continued concerns over recent euro strength and particularly the direction of tariffs," said ING global head of markets Chris Turner.
Trump appeared near the point of trying to fire Fed Chair Jerome Powell last week, but backed off with a nod to the market disruption that would likely follow. The U.S. central bank is widely expected to hold rates steady in its July meeting.
Traders are fully pricing in a rate cut by the October meeting with the odds of a second rate cut this year not fully priced in yet.
The New Zealand dollar eased 0.1% to $0.5957 after consumer inflation accelerated in the second quarter but stayed below economists' forecasts, leading markets to raise the chance of a rate cut next month given the broader economic weakness.
In cryptocurrencies, bitcoin was 1% higher at $11,412, holding below a record $123,153 reached last week.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
8 minutes ago
- The Independent
Why state pension age could rise again
Liz Kendall, the Work and Pensions Secretary, has launched a new pension commission and announced a review of the state pension age, warning of a "tsunami of pensioner poverty" without major reform. The review opens the door for an increase in the state pension age, currently 66 and set to rise to 67 by 2028 and 68 by 2046, with economic think tanks suggesting an acceleration is likely. Research indicates that future retirees in 2050 are projected to receive £800 less per year than current pensioners, with 2 million already in poverty and numbers expected to rise. Kendall highlighted that almost half of the working-age population is not saving for retirement, exacerbated by high housing costs, and noted a significant gender gap in private pension wealth. The new commission will provide recommendations by 2027 on boosting retirement income, though it will not examine the triple lock, which costs £31bn annually, or the state pension age review.


The Independent
8 minutes ago
- The Independent
Newspaper apologises to MP for ‘racist' cartoon
The Observer newspaper issued an apology and removed a cartoon after Zarah Sultana accused it of racism. The controversial cartoon depicted Ms Sultana on a raisin box, which she described as 'brownfacing' and mocking her surname. Ms Sultana criticised The Observer's apology as 'mealy-mouthed' for not explicitly labelling the cartoon as racist or directly naming her. The cartoon also featured Jeremy Corbyn with communist symbols, satirising the new political party he is forming with Ms Sultana. Ms Sultana resigned from the Labour Party earlier this month to establish a new political party with Mr Corbyn.


Times
8 minutes ago
- Times
Let the great water clean-up begin
C all this a 'Great Stink' moment? Back in 1858, it proved the cue for Joseph Bazalgette's 1,100 miles of sewers and pumping stations that transformed the health of London. This time all we've got is a 464-page report, overflowing with 88 recommendations, that even its author likened to a 'Russian novel'. All the same, Sir Jon Cunliffe has done us a favour. Maybe no one really needed such a lengthy treatise to spot that when it comes to water regulation the nation has long been up the creek without a paddle — or that scrapping Ofwat is overdue. Yet it's useful to see it spelt out so forensically. And with no truck, either, for the old Labour politics of environment secretary Steve Reed: a chap far too focused on sideshow stuff, such as bans on directors' bonuses, rather than a systemic fix for the problem. Cunliffe, a former Bank of England deputy governor, was clear that, given the job ahead, bills will have to rise and companies be able to pay for 'the best people'.