Investing.com -- Most Asian currencies moved little on Tuesday as markets hunkered down before a widely expected interest rate hike from the Federal Reserve this week, while the Australian dollar surged on an unexpected rate hike by the Reserve Bank
The Australian dollar jumped 1% after the Reserve Bank of Australia unexpectedly hiked its cash target rate by 25 basis points, to 3.85%. The move ducked market expectations that the bank will hold rates steady after pausing its rate hike cycle in April.
The RBA cited stubborn inflation as the main motivator for the move, stating that inflation still remained “too high.” Consumer price index inflation read at 7% in the first quarter of 2023, well above the RBA’s target range of 2% to 3%.
The RBA also said that it will consider more rate hikes, although future action will be largely dependent on economic data.
Broader Asian currencies moved little, as focus turned to the conclusion of a two-day Federal Reserve meeting on Wednesday. Regional trading volumes were also muted on account of a Chinese market holiday.
The Japanese yen fell 0.1% to a near two-month low, as it continued to reel from dovish signals offered by the Bank of Japan. The BOJ held interest rates at record lows last week, and signaled that it had no intention of altering its ultra-loose policy in the coming months.
While Chinese markets were closed, weak economic signals from the country also weighed on most regional currencies. China’s manufacturing sector unexpectedly shrank in April, data showed over the weekend, while growth in the services sector missed estimates.
The reading showed that a post-COVID rebound in the economy was running out of steam, which could herald continued weakness for China's largest regional trading partners.
The offshore yuan slid 0.4% on Monday, and was trading at a near two-month low. Chinese markets will resume trade from Thursday.
Broader markets were largely focused on Wednesday’s Fed meeting, where the central bank is expected to hike interest rates by 25 basis points.
The dollar index and dollar index futures fell slightly on Tuesday after logging strong gains over the past two sessions.
But markets are uncertain over whether the Fed will signal a pause in its rate hike cycle, given that inflation remained sticky in recent months. High U.S. interest rates bode poorly for Asian currencies, as the gap between risky and low-risk yields narrows.