Business News

Australian dollar hits 8-month high as commodity units rise

TOKYO, (APP/AFP): The Australian dollar
hit an eight-month high Monday as commodity-linked currencies got a
boost on the back of a rise in global equity markets, with investors focusing on a string of central bank meetings.
The Aussie currency bought 75.94 US cents in afternoon Tokyo trading,
its highest level since July, while the New Zealand and Canadian dollars also got a boost.
A pickup in investor sentiment lifted demand for riskier, emerging
currencies.
South Korea’s won rose to its highest level in more than two months,
while the Philippine peso gained 0.41 percent and the Indonesian rupiah was up 0.58 percent.
The Bank of Japan started a two-day meeting Monday, while the Federal
Reserve and Bank of England also hold meetings this week.
Markets are keen to see if Japanese policymakers unleash fresh
stimulus, after launching a widely-panned negative interest rate policy in January, while the Fed talks will be watched for clues about a possible timeline for more rate hikes.
The meetings come after the European Central Bank last week cut rates
and boosted its bond-buying in a bid to kickstart the tepid eurozone economy.
“Central banks are going to be dominating market sentiment,” Matthew
Sherwood, head of investment strategy at Perpetual Ltd in Sydney, told
Bloomberg News.
“That could be enough for the risk rally to continue, but I think it
is starting to run out of steam.”