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Yen hits 8-week high; sterling drops after Bank of England rate cut

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By Hannah Lang, Greta Rosen Fondahn

NEW YORK/GDANSK (Reuters) -The yen touched an eight-week high versus the dollar on Thursday after a Bank of Japan policy board member advocated continued interest rate hikes, while sterling slid as the Bank of England cut rates.

The pound fell 0.8% to $1.24065 after the Bank of England cut interest rates as expected, but forecast higher inflation and weaker growth, with two officials calling for an even larger rate cut.

Sterling had touched a one-month high at $1.2437 on Wednesday.

Money markets now price in around 67 basis points of further BoE easing by the end of the year.

“The pound’s losses may prove somewhat limited: the services-driven British economy is largely sheltered against trade war risks,” Karl Schamotta, chief market strategist with payments company Corpay in Toronto, said in a research note.

The dollar index was up against a basket of peers at 107.92, but it still hovered near the lowest level since the start of last week, with investors beginning to entertain prospects that a global trade war could be averted.

In the absence of tariff headlines, markets looked ahead to the release on Friday of key U.S. monthly payrolls figures, the next major test for the U.S. monetary policy outlook.

The dollar index hit a two-year high of 110.17 on January 13, but has since retreated 2%.

“Driving this correction have been several factors, the largest of which has probably been this week’s tariff news, where it looks like the Trump administration has been using tariffs for transactional not ideological purposes,” said Chris Turner, global head of markets at ING.

U.S. President Donald Trump suspended planned tariff measures against Mexico and Canada this week, but imposed additional 10% levies on imports from China.

YEN STRENGTH

The yen strengthened as far as 151.81 per dollar – the strongest level since December 12 – in the Tokyo morning, after the BOJ’s Naoki Tamura said the central bank must raise rates to at least 1% or so in the latter half of fiscal 2025 with upward risks to prices rising.

Japan’s currency was last changing hands at 151.85 per dollar, up 0.5% on the previous day, paring some of the early gains after Tamura clarified that he didn’t mean that the neutral rate should be 1%.

“Tamura is known to be on the hawkish side,” although his comments initially “fired up yen longs”, said Shoki Omori, chief global desk strategist at Mizuho Securities.

Omori added that geopolitics was the main factor that could drive the yen higher.

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