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Markets

Yen ticks up in Asia as BoJ stands pat on policy

Published September 4, 2014 Updated September 4, 2014 05:25am

imageTOKYO: The yen ticked up in Asia Thursday after the Bank of Japan refrained from expanding its monetary easing programme, despite a slate of poor data for the world's number three economy.

In midday Tokyo trade, the greenback slipped to 104.80 yen, down from 104.91 yen earlier in the day, but still up from 104.78 yen in New York.

The euro bought 137.82 yen, down from 137.92 yen in the morning and a touch higher than 137.81 yen in New York.

The single currency also changed hands at $1.3148, against $1.3152 in US trade.

Japan's central bank stuck by its view that the economy was recovering, despite a contraction in the second quarter that underlined the damage inflicted by an April sales tax hike.

Policymakers held fire on expanding the BoJ's vast stimulus programme following a two-day policy meeting, although they flagged housing and industrial production as weak spots, along with shaky demand for Japanese exports.

Investors will now turn their focus to a regular post-meeting briefing from BoJ governor Haruhiko Kuroda at 0630 GMT to see if he hints at future moves to counter the downturn.

Despite the dollar's lack of steam, it was "just a matter of time" before it rises again, said Yunosuke Ikeda, Nomura Securities chief FX strategist. The greenback this week broke through the 105 yen barrier for the first time since January.

Eyes will later be on the European Central Bank's policy meeting later Thursday, with analysts mixed over whether it will launch further measures to counter the growing threat of deflation in the eurozone.

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