Back

USD/JPY revisits 120.50 on higher Japanese equities

FXStreet (Mumbai) - The USD/JPY pair found renewed bids near 120.40 region and reverted towards daily highs at 5-DMA as the bulls find support from higher Japanese equities.

USD/JPY could rise to 10-DMA at 120.99

Currently, the USD/JPY pair trades 0.18% higher at 120.50, testing session highs reached at 120.54 in early Asia. The major picked-up strength and extended higher as markets received fresh impetus from renewed risk-on sentiment after the Japanese stocks accelerated to the upside. The benchmark Nikkei jumps 0.70% to 18,900.

Moreover, the losses in the yen versus its US counterpart could be also partly attributed to the weak datasets from Japan released earlier today. Industrial production in Japan dropped 1.0% m/m in November, missing forecasts for a decline of 0.5% following the 1.4% gain in October. While the total value of retail sales in Japan was down 1.0% on year in November.

Later today, the major is likely to remain underpinned on the back of low liquidity while lack of fresh fundamentals may restrict further upside. Most global markets remain closed today in account of Boxing Day holiday.

USD/JPY Technical levels to watch

In terms of technicals, the immediate resistance is located at 120.68 (1h 50-SMA). A break above the last, the major could test 120.99 (10-DMA). While to the downside, the immediate support is located at 120.23 (daily pivot) below which 120.02 (Dec 25 Low) would be tested.

USD still lower amid holiday-quiet Asia

Last week’s US dollar weakness extends into Asia as markets continue to consolidate post-FOMC gains while the yen loses ground following the release of weak Japanese macro data. The Antipodeans remain supported amid low volumes as the OZ markets remain closed today on account of Boxing Day holiday.
Mehr darüber lesen Previous

UK in 2016: Bank rate rises & Brexit risk - RBS

Ross Walker, Senior UK Economist at RBS, suggests that two issues will dominate the UK economic landscape in 2016: BoE Bank Rate hikes and ‘Brexit’ (British withdrawal from the European Union).
Mehr darüber lesen Next