Dollar dips ahead of US inflation data, supported by rate outlook
SPY•Yen remains near 40-year lows
The Japanese yen JPY= edged 0.1% higher to 162.27 per dollar on Tuesday, but was barely above 40-year lows, which kept traders on alert for signs of possible official buying from Tokyo.
The Japanese currency briefly strengthened following comments from Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama that Tokyo may consider adjusting state pension fund asset allocations if the environment surrounding asset management changed sharply.
Health Minister Kenichiro Ueno told a separate press conference on Tuesday that the ministry would examine reviewing the Government Pension Investment Fund's (GPIF) asset allocation if needed, but downplayed the prospect of any near-term changes.
"In order for yen-buying pressure from a review of GPIF's asset allocation to be sustained, the decision would likely need to be made quickly, and the increases in the allocation to domestic assets would probably need to be at least 5 percentage points" in stocks and bonds each, said Masafumi Yamamoto, chief currency strategist at Mizuho Securities.




