Sunday, March 8, 2026

​Dollar under pressure, drifts toward weekly ​decline

  • by Jonathan Adams
  • February 12, 2026
  • 196 views

The yen traded as strong as 152.55, the euro was firm at $1.1875, sterling held at $1.3628 and the kiwi at $0.6052

The yen, Aussie and yuan had the ​dollar under pressure on Thursday and drifting toward a weekly ​decline, as investor focus turned to ​U.S. labour and inflation data.

A stronger-than-expected U.S. jobs report overnight briefly lifted the dollar. But traders are taking recent signs of U.S. economic resilience as cues for a broader brightening in global growth and ‌are laying bets on Japan as a likely winner.

The yen is up more than 2.6% since Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s Liberal Democratic Party swept to a landslide victory at Sunday’s election and a mood shift seems to be afoot as markets set aside fears about spending to focus ‌on growth.

Against the dollar, the yen traded as strong as 152.55 on Wednesday, before steadying slightly below that at 153.05 per dollar on ‌Thursday.

It’s Japan buying, said Naka Matsuzawa, chief strategist at Nomura Securities in Tokyo, with the yen – rather than the euro – turning into the favoured avenue for investing outside the U.S.

Foreigners are buying both stocks ⁠and bonds, ​he said. With a stronger government, the ⁠market hopes for higher growth.

Yen gains could easily accelerate, analysts said, if it broke past resistance around 152 per dollar, or even the 200-day moving average at 150.5. It ⁠has also rose 2% on the euro in two sessions and breaking to the strong side of a 50-day moving average.

Thursday morning moves were fairly small, but the Australian dollar was above 71 cents and creeping back towards a three-year top after ⁠the ​central bank governor said the board would hike rates again if inflation becomes entrenched.

The euro was firm at $1.1875, sterling held at $1.3628 and the kiwi at $0.6052.

The other major mover on the dollar in recent weeks has been yuan, which has been a steady gainer on ⁠the back of booming exports and hints from authorities that China may tolerate a stronger currency.

Corporate demand ahead of the Lunar New Year ⁠holiday helped it to a 33-month top ⁠of 6.9057 per dollar on Wednesday and in offshore trade on Thursday it was a fraction firmer still at 6.9025.

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