Yen Rebounds After Another North Korean Missile, Aussie Tumble As RBA

 | Jul 04, 2017 04:43AM ET

Yen rebounds strongly in Asian session today following steep in decline in China and Hong Kong stocks markets. In particular, the HK HSI is trading down -400 pts, or -1.5% at the time of writing, led by tech titan Tencent and casino stocks. Some attributes the selloff to North Korea's firing of another ballistic missile just ahead of July 4. That drew response from US President Donald Trump, with his tweet that "hard to believe that South Korea and Japan will put up with this much longer". And Trump tried to shift the spot to China again saying that "perhaps China will put a heavy move on North Korea and end this nonsense once and for all!" USD/JPY is back below 113 after surging to 113.46 overnight following the stronger than expected ISM manufacturing data.

Speculations of new BoJ head grow

Also from Japan, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's advisor Esuro Honda said in a telephone interview last week regarding BoJ that "what's important, especially this time, is whether we can undertake regime change". And for the next BoJ Governor, "it should be someone who is refreshing enough and can renew people's impressions with personal charm and sincerity." This is sharp turn from his prior comments that reappointing current BoJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda after his term ends next April is an option.

Another advisor, former BoJ board member Nobuyuki Nakahara also said earlier this week that BoJ will need "someone who can prepare for" stimulus exit in the next five years. And Kuroda "will fall into inertia and struggle to come up with bold new ideas". There are growing speculations that Kuroda will not be re-appointed.

Also from Japan, monetary base rose 17.0% yoy in June versus expectation of 19.2% yoy.

Aussie tumbles as RBA stays balanced

Aussie tumbles sharply today after RBA left interest rate unchanged at 1.50% as widely expected. The statement is balanced and markets are disappointed that RBA doesn't turn hawkish like some other global central banks. Policymakers expected that Australian economy would "strengthen gradually". However, they remained concerned over the "subdued" consumption growth, suggesting it reflected "slow growth in real wages and high levels of household debt".

Meanwhile, RBA remained cautious over the property market. As noted in the statement, "in the eastern capital cities, a considerable additional supply of apartments is scheduled to come on stream over the next couple of years. Rent increases are the slowest for two decades". RBA added that "growth in housing debt has outpaced the slow growth in household incomes".

Also from Australian, retail sales rose 0.6% mom in May, above expectation of 0.2% mom.

AUD/JPY possibly in near term reversal

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AUD/JPY's sharp fall today now raises the chance that rebound from 81.48 is completed at 86.97, ahead of 88.21 resistance. Focus is now back on 85.07 support. Break there will extend the corrective pattern from 88.21 with another falling leg, back to 38.2% retracement of 72.39 to 88.21 at 82.17. In case of another rise, we'd be cautious on topping at 88.21.