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Bitcoin hit a historic high of $109,760 as easing trade tensions and U.S. fiscal concerns drive investors away from the dollar, with increasing institutional involvement bolstering long-term optimism....
US Secretary Scott Bessent and Japanese Finance Minister Katsunobu Kato did not discuss foreign exchange levels during a meeting in Canada, according to a statement from the Treasury Department. The news sent the yen lower.
Bessent and Kato “reaffirmed their shared belief that exchange rates should be market determined and that, at present, the dollar-yen exchange rate reflects fundamentals,” the department said Wednesday.
The officials met on the sidelines of a meeting of finance ministers and central bank governors from the Group of Seven nations being held in Banff, Canada.
Bessent and Kato discussed issues relevant to the US-Japanese economic relationship, including global security and the ongoing bilateral trade discussions between the two nations, the department said.
The yen weakened as much as 0.5% to ¥144.40 against the dollar after the news. Japan’s currency was the worst performer among its Group of 10 peers against the dollar on Thursday morning in Tokyo.
Still, the reaffirmation on the currency helps Kato lower the risk of a rapid weakening of the yen after his ministry has struggled to clearly reverse course in the last few years.
The outcome of the meeting suggests the US has no major issue with the yen’s appreciation after President Donald Trump accused of Japan taking an unfair advantage by lowering the value of the currency.
Any rapid movement in the strength of the yen could increase the chance of a recession, regardless of direction, especially as Japan and the US continue negotiations on a trade agreement.
A much weaker yen would fuel inflationary pressures while a stronger currency would squeeze corporate profits and wage momentum as trade concerns are already hurting consumer sentiment. Japan’s economy contracted in the first quarter.
This was the pair’s second face-to-face talk in a month after the two met in April.
The European Central Bank isn’t far from achieving its 2% inflation target, helped by a stronger euro and falling energy costs, according to Vice President Luis de Guindos.
Those two factors will give a “downward push” to the retreat in consumer prices in the 20-nation euro zone, the Spanish official told Bloomberg Television. The impact of US tariffs is less clear but will be deflationary in the short term, he said.
“The disinflationary process is ongoing,” Guindos said Wednesday. “Sooner than later we’ll be able to reach our definition of price stability on a sustainable basis.”
Officials are expected to cut interest rates again in June and may be open to further easing. Belgium’s Pierre Wunsch told Bloomberg Tuesday that “mildly supportive” policy may be needed to secure an economic recovery and ensure inflation doesn’t dip below 2%. He called market bets for a terminal rate of 1.75% in 2025 “reasonable.”
Euro-zone inflation held at 2.2% in April due to a surge in underlying prices, but analysts forecast a reversal in May — probably pushing inflation even below 2%.
The European Commission this week said that consumer prices will probably rise by 2.1% this year and 1.7% in 2026.
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European Central Bank Governing Council member Jose Luis Escriva said the euro and energy prices have been weighing on consumer-price growth, while the fallout from US tariffs is more complicated to evaluate.
“In the short term there are things that have even surprised us: the dollar depreciation and euro appreciation it’s not the kind of normal reaction in a situation such as this,” the Spanish said Wednesday in Alcalá de Henares, near Madrid.
Speaking about the ECB’s upcoming new economic forecasts, he said that “we need to incorporate to our analysis something that has an impact in more volatile components of inflation — we’ve seen a widespread decrease on energy and raw materials that will impact inflation in the short term.”
Those new projections for growth and inflation are set to be published on June 5, when the ECB Governing Council next sets borrowing costs. A quarter-point interest-rate cut is almost certain — the eighth such move in this cycle — with some officials suggesting more might be needed after that.
Policymakers aren’t sure how long the current disinflationary trend will continue and have repeatedly highlighted that the outlook is uncertain — primarily because of US President Donald Trump’s trade policy.
“What we’re seeing on tariffs is more difficult to calibrate” because their impact will depend on whether Europe retaliates, Escriva said, adding that the ECB will be presenting several scenarios in addition to the baseline.
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