- Euro, yen little changed; focus on Sino-U.S. trade wars
- Yuan off 11-month low after PBOC assurances
- Short-term yuan implied volatilities surpass euro, yen vols
- Dollar may be undermined by slip in U.S. yields
Major currencies were on tenterhooks on Thursday on the eve of Washington's deadline to impose tariffs on Chinese imports while the yuan held steady after the central bank this week sought to stem its recent tumble.
The euro stood little changed at $1.1661 EUR= , having found firm support near $1.15 over the past few weeks despite worries about an economic slowdown and political instability in Europe.
The dollar traded at 110.48 yen JPY= , off a five-week high of 111.14 on Friday.
The offshore yuan fetched 6.6350 per dollar CNH=D4 , keeping some distance from Tuesday's 11-month low of 6.7344, following reassuring remarks from Yi Gang, governor of the People's Bank of China.
"Chinese authorities had initially appeared to approve fall in the yuan to support the economy ahead of a possible start of U.S. tariffs," Minori Uchida, chief currency strategist at MUFG Bank.
"But then there's a memory of massive capital outflows in 2016, which wiped out a quarter of their foreign reserves. So I would think they felt they needed to stem the yuan's fall. Given that, the yuan may stay firm for now," he said.
Yet market players are nervous as they braced for a full-scale Sino-U.S. trade war. Washington has said it would implement tariffs on $34 billion of Chinese imports on July 6, and Beijing has vowed to retaliate in kind on the same day.
China's finance ministry, however, said on Wednesday Beijing will "absolutely not" fire the first shot in a trade war with the United States and will not be the first to levy tariffs.
As investors tried to hedge against further gyrations in the yuan, the implied volatility of one-week dollar/yuan options CNHSWO= has risen to a five-month high of 7.350 percent.
That was above the implied volatilities of the euro/dollar EURSWO= , which stood at 6.675 percent, for the first time ever. The yen's one-week volatility JPYSWO= was quoted at 6.925 percent JPYSWO= , also the first time since late 2015 it traded below volatility in the yuan.
Because of Beijing's control, the yuan's implied volatility had long stayed below that of major free-float currencies such as the euro and the yen.
The British pound held firm at $1.3221 GBP=D4 after a survey on Wednesday showing Britain's dominant services industry gained momentum last month fuelled expectations of a Bank of England interest rate rise this summer.
The Canadian dollar also held near three-week high, helped by rise in oil prices.
The loonie stood at C$1.3146 to the dollar CAD=D3 , after having risen to C$1.3113 on Wednesday, its highest since mid-June.
The index of the U.S. dollar against six other major rivals was at 94.539 .DXY , having slipped to 94.397 on Wednesday, its lowest level in over a week.
While the dollar has been supported by the perception of the relative strength of the U.S. economic growth and the attraction of its higher bond yields, some market players say recent falls in U.S. bond yields may be undermining the dollar.
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