The pound edged up to
$1.3302 GBP=D4, stabilizing after an 11 percent plunge to a 31-year trough of
$1.3122 a week ago in the wake of Britain's June 23 vote to leave the European
Union.
While far less dramatic,
Australia's general election on Saturday produced no clear winner after more
than two-thirds of the votes were counted. Headlines such as 'Chaos Reigns'
were splashed across front pages of some Australian tabloids.
That gave investors an easy
excuse to sell the Aussie, which slid as far as $0.7410 AUD=D4 in thin early
trade, from $0.7495 late in New York on Friday. It has since rebounded to
$0.7499.
"A hung parliament in
Australia has not been historically conducive to good governance and policy
reform, and the risk of losing the AAA/stable credit rating is not
insignificant," said Annette Beacher, chief Asia-Pacific macro strategist
at TDSecurities.
"While the AUD could
sag on the uncertainty, fiscal policy tends to be a slow burn issue and the RBA
on Tuesday is more of a marquee event for the markets."
Almost all 37 economists
polled by Reuters last week expect the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) to keep
the cash rate unchanged at a record low 1.75 percent.
Yet, there are some
expectations the central bank might reinstate a clear easing bias, an outcome
that should keep the Aussie under the pump.
For the other major
currencies, Brexit is starting to fade as a driver with nerves soothed by
promises of more stimulus from the Bank of England and talk of UK corporate tax
cuts to offset the shock of leaving the EU.
The clear fallout from
Brexit is that investors no longer expect the Federal Reserve to hike U.S.
interest rates this year, while other major central banks are seen poised to
ease policy further.
Highlighting the theme of
lower rates for longer, U.S. Treasury yields plunged on Friday with the
benchmark 10-year US10YT=RR briefly reaching a four-year trough of 1.382
percent, before closing at 1.461 percent.
The euro stood at $1.1130
EUR=, versus $1.1139 on Friday, and it was little changed at 114.31 yen
EURJPY=R. The dollar was steady at 102.62 yen JPY=.
But some traders say the
impact of Brexit could take longer to emerge given nothing concrete has been
set after the referendum, including when and how that will happen.
"Clearly, funds will
flow out of the UK. The question is where that would money will go. The
recovery in risk sentiment over the past week seems a bit risky. I would expect
more safe-haven buying in the yen," said Koichi Takamatsu, head of forex
at Nomura Securities in Tokyo.
With U.S. markets shut for
the Independence Day public holiday, trading is expected to be subdued on the
day. There is no major data out of Asia on Monday.
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