By Rae Wee SINGAPORE (Reuters) -The yen rose after the Bank of Japan (BOJ) hiked rates on Friday and revised up its inflation forecasts, while the Australian and New Zealand dollars surged on U.S.
Global shares rose on Friday buoyed by the prospect of lower U.S. interest rates and a U.S.-China trade deal following ...
Consumer prices excluding fresh food rose 3% from a year earlier in December, accelerating from 2.7% in the previous month through higher energy costs, the Ministry of Internal Affairs reported Friday ...
Ueda and his fellow board members lifted the overnight call rate by a quarter-percentage point to 0.5% at the end of a two-day meeting.
Singapore dollar strengthened against its U.S. counterpart amid falling Treasury yields that may diminish the allure of U.S. fixed-income assets and demand for the greenback.
"The BOJ put the price outlook above 2% for both fiscal 2025 and 2026, revised up from the previous forecasts of 1.9% for both years. This indicates that the BOJ would continue raising interest rates ...
As the dollar prepares for its worst weekly loss in two months, global markets ride a wave of optimism fueled by Trump's trade chatter, while the yen steadies itself for a likely rate hike.
ASIAN markets rose on Friday after a record day on Wall Street in response to Donald Trump’s tax-cut pledge, while the yen weakened slightly ahead of an expected interest rate hike by the Bank of ...
In addition, MPACT is exposed to foreign currency risk as about half of its assets under management are outside of Singapore. This is managed by using foreign currency-denominated borrowings as a ...
SINGAPORE--The yen was front and center for currency markets on Friday ahead of a Bank of Japan (BOJ) policy decision where it is all but certain to raise interest rates, while the dollar was headed ...
The number of phishing emails received by Australians surged by 30% last year, according to new research by Abnormal Security.
Global shares rose on Friday buoyed by the prospect of lower U.S. interest rates following comments from President Donald ...