The yield on benchmark 10-year Treasury bond edged up to 4.1307% compared with its U.S. close of 4.127% on Tuesday. The Federal Reserve is still widely expected to lower interest rates later this month, with Fed funds futures implying a 94.6% probability of a 25-basis-point cut, according to the CME Group‘s FedWatch tool. Precious metals markets recorded fresh highs as investors sought safe havens, with U.S. gold futures breaching the $4,000 per ounce milestone on Tuesday. “Uncertainty about the global economy is one of the main drivers, and the U.S. government shutdown isn’t exactly helping sentiment either,” analysts from ING wrote in a research note. Against the yen, the dollar was trading at 152.205 yen, up 0.2% from late U.S. levels and hovering near the strongest level since February, as investors weigh up the impact of Sanae Takaichi‘s economic policy settings.
Takaichi, who surprised markets by winning the ruling party’s leadership election over the weekend to become Japan’s next prime minister, has left investors wondering whether the protege of the late Shinzo Abe could usher in similar stimulus policies that may boost stocks but leave the yen fragile.
The kiwi traded at $0.5801, little changed before the Reserve Bank of New Zealand‘s policy decision later in the day. The central bank is widely expected to ease monetary policy, but markets are split on whether it will cut by 25 basis points or 50 basis points to revive a weakened economy. The Australian dollar was unchanged at $0.65836. The euro stood at $1.1655, steady so far in Asia, while sterling was at $1.3429, up 0.1%. The offshore yuan fetched 7.1469 yuan per dollar, trading flat compared with the previous session.