Yen Starts Year on Front Foot as Traders Eye Dollar Cliff Edge

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Japanese yen coins and banknotes on a tray arranged at a branch of Resona Bank Ltd. in Tokyo, Japan, on Tuesday, Aug. 9, 2022. Dollar-yen, which soared 38% from a March 2020 trough to mid-July this year, is in retreat. Photographer: Kiyoshi Ota/Bloomberg

The yen started 2023 with modest gains Monday as traders weighed the risk of further technical strength amid thin holiday trading.

The Japanese currency climbed as much as 0.3% to 130.77 per dollar in early Tokyo trading. A close below the dollar-yen's August low of 130.41 would open up the door for further declines in the pair, according to chart watchers.

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Some investors opened small short-dollar positions on the chance a break occurs in the absence of normal market liquidity, said some Asia-based FX traders familiar with the transactions who asked not to be identified because they aren't authorized to speak publicly.

The yen has climbed some 16% from its October nadir amid government intervention, hopes for slowing US rate hikes and speculation over the possibility of a policy shift from the Bank of Japan this year. The BOJ's surprise December decision to tweak its yield curve control parameters is seen by many as a sign its ultra-easy monetary policy might soon be coming to an end.

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