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Markets

Yen ticks up in Asia after easing-sparked tumble

Published December 25, 2012 Updated December 25, 2012 04:11am

yen 400TOKYO: The yen edged higher in Asian trade on Tuesday after tumbling on speculation that the Bank of Japan would launch more easing measures in the face of political demands for policy action.

 

The dollar bought 84.74 yen in Tokyo morning trade, a shade lower than 84.82 yen in New York Monday afternoon, after climbing to 85 yen, a level last breached in April 2011.

 

The euro fetched 111.69 yen and $1.3178 from 111.87 yen and $1.3183 in US trade.

 

The Japanese currency had dipped against the dollar and the euro on Monday after incoming prime minister Shinzo Abe, whose Liberal Democratic Party won a landslide national election last week, renewed calls on the Bank of Japan to take further steps to ease monetary policy.

 

Abe at the weekend threatened to change a law guaranteeing the central bank's independence if it did not agree to set a two-percent inflation target as he requested in a bid to drag the country out of the deflation that has haunted its economy for years.

 

Tokyo markets were closed Monday for a national holiday.

 

Despite pessimism over divided US lawmakers reaching a deal on the fiscal cliff, dealers said the dollar could see more upward momentum after reaching a 20-month high earlier.

 

On Thursday, Japan's central bank expanded an asset-buying programme -- its main policy tool -- by 10 trillion yen ($119 billion) to 101 trillion yen, days after the conservative LDP won a weekend election promising to boost spending and pressure the central bank for aggressive action.

 

With most regional markets closed for a holiday, forex trade was expected to remain quiet on Tuesday.

Copyright AFP (Agence France-Presse), 2012

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