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The Dollar Takes a Hit as Economic Data Continues to Play 2nd Fiddle to the Coronavirus

In This Article:

Earlier in the Day:

It was a relatively busy day on the Asian economic calendar this morning. The Japanese Yen and Aussie Dollar were in action.

For the Japanese Yen

Economic data included, February inflation figures and January’s job to applications ratio, industrial production, and retail sales figures.

According to consumer price figures released by the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communication. The Ku-area of Tokyo saw the annual core rate of inflation ease from 0.7% to 0.5%, falling beyond a forecasted 0.6%.

  • Prices for Education slid by 6%, with prices for fuel, light and water charges falling by 2.8%.

  • There were solid increases in prices for clothes & footwear (+2.4%) and furniture and household utensils (+2.0%), however.

  • Prices for medical care (+1.3%), transportation and communication (+1.0%), culture and recreation (+0.9%) also provided support.

  • Prices for housing rose by just 0.5%, however.

With inflationary pressures easing in February, jobs available also eased, as the jobs/applications ratio fell from 1.57 to 1.49. The ratio last stood at sub-1.50 levels back in May 2017, when the ratio had also stood at 1.49.

The Japanese Yen moved from ¥109.638 to ¥109.616 upon release of the figures that preceded the industrial production and retail sales figures.

Retail Sales and Industrial Production

According to the Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry, retail sales fell by 0.4% in January, year-on-year, following a 2.6% slide in December. Economists had forecasted a 1.1% decline.

Industrial production increased by 0.8% in January, according to prelim figures, following a 1.2% rise in December. Economists had forecast a 0.2% rise.

According to the Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry,

Industries that mainly contributed to the increase were:

  • Motor vehicles, transport equipment (excl. motor vehicles), and other manufacturing.

Industries that mainly contributed to a decrease were

  • Production machinery, general-purpose and business orientated machinery, and electrical machinery, and information, and communication electronics equipment.

The Japanese Yen moved from ¥109.652 to ¥109.571 upon release of the figures. At the time of writing, the Japanese Yen was up by 0.06% to ¥109.52 against the U.S Dollar.

For the Aussie Dollar

According to figures released by RBA, total credit increased by 0.3%, month-on-month, in January. In December, credit had risen by 0.2%.

  • Business credit jumped by 0.5%, following a 0.2% rise in December, supporting the marginal uptick.

  • Personal credit fell at a sharper pace, however. Following a 0.4% decline in December, personal credit fell by 0.6% in January.

  • Housing credit rose by 0.3%, following a 0.3% increase in December.


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