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The safe-haven yen weakened versus the dollar on Friday on hopes upcoming US-China trade talks would make some progress, but broader market confidence remained weak amid worries over slowing global growth. Market sentiment perked up after China confirmed that trade talks with the United States will be held at the vice ministerial level in Beijing on Jan. 7-8. Trade tensions between the world's two largest economies had rattled financial markets for most of 2018.
The yen weakened 0.6 percent to 108.31 while riskier currencies such as the Australian dollar gained 0.2 percent to $0.7020. The bounce in dollar/yen comes after what many traders described as a 'flash crash' on Thursday, when it collapsed to an intra-day low of 105.25 in a technically-driven sell-off.
The dollar index was relatively unchanged at 96.3. The index fell 0.56 percent in the previous session. The euro and sterling were unchanged from Thursday's close at $1.1393 and $1.2636, respectively. "Sentiment has shifted slightly towards the positive side, which is why we are seeing the yen weaken while Aussie dollar is rising," said Margaret Yang, markets analyst at CMC Markets.
However, fears of a sharp slowdown in economic growth and a failure of the trade talks are likely to keep investors from diving back into riskier assets in a big way in the coming weeks. Weaker-than-expected US factory activity has heightened investor expectations the Federal Reserve will not raise rates in 2019, and possibly even cut them in 2020. Data has also been weak out of China and Europe.
Spooked by signs of fresh troubles in the world's largest economy, investors rushed to the safety of bonds. The US two-year Treasury note yield dropped below 2.4 percent on Thursday, reaching parity with the federal funds effective rate for the first time since 2008. The Fed raised rates four times in 2018 on the back of strong growth and a robust labour market. However, with financial conditions tightening, most analysts now do not expect the Fed to raise rates in 2019.
Indeed, interest rate futures markets are now fully pricing in a rate cut by April next year. In an interview with Bloomberg on Thursday, Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan acknowledged issues such as the deceleration of global growth, tightening of financial conditions and widening credit spreads. "My own view is we shouldn't take any further action on interest rates until these issues are resolved for better or for worse...," Kaplan said.
"So I would be an advocate of taking no action during the first couple of quarters of this year...we should be patient and give some time for this economy and watch how this situation unfolds."

Copyright Reuters, 2019

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