Australian Dollar Tumbles after RBA Disappoints, Asia FX Rises

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By Ambar Warrick

Investing.com-- Most Asian currencies took some relief from a weakening dollar and rose slightly on Tuesday, while the Australian dollar tumbled after the central bank raised rates by less than expected.

The Australian dollar fell 0.8% to $0.6466 after the Reserve Bank of Australia raised interest rates by a lower-than-expected 25 basis points (bps). The central bank said it intends to maintain a balance between curbing inflation and ensuring that sharp hikes in interest rates do not dampen economic growth.

While the RBA still flagged more interest rate hikes this year, the move was bearish for the Australian dollar, as the gap between local and international interest rates widens.

The Australian economy is struggling with inflation reaching a 20-year high, driven by rising fuel and food costs. The RBA has raised rates six times so far this year.

Broader Asian currencies rose as a batch of weak U.S. economic data spurred bets that the Fed would soften its hawkish tone to prevent further economic ructions. The dollar index and dollar futures both fell 0.1%, and marked four straight days of losses.

A week-long holiday in China and Hong Kong made for languid trading volumes in the region.

But China’s offshore yuan rose 0.2%, recovering further from a record low touched last month.

China has rolled out a slew of measures to spur a recovery in the yuan, including more bullish daily fixes and intervention in currency markets.

But analysts warned that rising U.S. interest rates and a strong dollar are likely to keep pressuring the yuan in the near-term, given that Chinese interest rates have fallen well below their global peers this year.

The South Korean won rose 0.2%, recovering from a 13-year low, while the Indonesian rupiah rose 0.1%.

The Japanese yen bucked the trend, falling 0.2% and coming close to a 24-year low of around 145 against the dollar. The yen was pressured by data showing that inflation in Tokyo rose to an eight-year high in September, pointing to more economically damaging inflationary pressures on the country.

Rising oil prices weighed on the Indian rupee, which fell 0.1%.

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