Dollar Holds Steady, Eyes on Obama Asia Tour

W460

The dollar held steady against the yen in Asia on Wednesday, with traders looking for developments in U.S.-Japan free trade talks as President Barack Obama starts an Asian tour.

In Tokyo midday trade, the greenback changed hands at 102.57, a touch down from 102.60 yen in New York Tuesday afternoon, while the euro bought $1.3809 and 141.66 yen, against $1.3804 and 141.65 yen.

Akira Moroga, manager of forex product group of Aozora Bank, said with Obama due in Tokyo later Wednesday investors will be keeping an eye on signs of progress in the vast Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade pact.

Work on the deal has stalled recently, with Washington and Tokyo at loggerheads over tariffs on Japanese agricultural products. 

Any signs of progress could help boost the Nikkei and stoke yen selling, Moroga said.

Also Wednesday, Bank of Japan governor Haruhiko Kuroda repeated his view that there was no imminent need to expand its stimulus programme to reach an inflation target of 2.0 percent next year.

"At this point, there is nothing more to say than we will continue the quantitative and qualitative easing programme in its current form until we achieve our goal to generate stable 2.0 percent inflation," Kuroda told a parliamentary session.

The Australian dollar fell to 93.14 U.S. cents from 93.75 cents after data showed Australian inflation was lower than expected in the first three months of the year. The figures raise the possibility the country's central bank will lower interest rates to boost the faltering economy.

Also on investors' radars is the crisis in Ukraine, which on Tuesday relaunched military operations against pro-Kremlin separatists, hours after U.S. Vice President Joe Biden ended a two-day Kiev visit in which he warned Russia over its actions in the former Soviet republic.

U.S. stocks rose on Tuesday after a series of deals between pharmaceutical giants Novartis, GlaxoSmithKline and Eli Lilly.

There was little movement in forex markets after HSBC said its preliminary purchasing managers index (PMI) of China's manufacturing activity came in at 48.3 in April, up from 48.0 in March. While the result points to a continuing contraction in the Asian economic giant, the rate has slowed.

A figure below 50 suggests shrinkage, while anything above points to growth.

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