USD/JPY has posted gains in the Tuesday session, continuing the upward movement we saw on Monday. In the North American session, USD/JPY is trading at 105.61, up 0.20% on the day. On the inflation front, Japanese Services Producer Price Index ticked lower to 0.6%, missing the forecast of 0.7%. The Bank of Japan Core CPI remained unchanged at 0.8%, edging above the estimate of 0.7%. In the US, CB Consumer Confidence dropped to 127.7, missing the forecast of 131.2 points. As well, the Richmond Manufacturing Index dropped sharply to 15 points, well off the estimate of 23 points. On Wednesday, the US releases Final GDP and Japan will publish Retail Sales.
The tariff spat between China and the US has shaken up global stock markets and also caused volatility in the currency markets. The safe-haven Japanse yen gained 1.2% last week and hit 5-month highs, as risk appetite sagged after US President Trump slapped tariffs on China on Thursday. However, fears of a global trading war which could spark a worldwide recession have eased this week, and the yen is lower, as investor risk appetite has improved. This follows the Chinese decision to file applications with the World Trade Organization regarding the tariffs, a move which could lead to an amicable resolution of the tariff spat between the two largest economies in the world.
Japanese inflation remains around 1 percent, well below the Bank of Japan target of around 2 percent. BoJ officials have consistently said that it will not reduce its ultra-accommodative monetary policy until inflation moves closer to target. With the rebound in the Japanese economy, there has been speculation that the BoJ could tighten its policy, which could cause some volatility from the yen.
US durable goods reports ended the week on a high note, but the dollar still lost ground on Friday. Core Durable Goods Orders rebounded with a strong gain of 1.2%, crushing the estimate of 0.5%. This marked the strongest gain since July 2016. Durable Goods Orders jumped to an 8-month high, with a gain of 3.1%. The reading easily beat the forecast of 1.6%. The US manufacturing sector continues to expand at an impressive clip, a result of stronger global growth and a cheaper US dollar, which makes US goods less expensive for foreign buyers.