Canadian Dollar: Downside risk against US Dollar as BoC stays patient – BBH

Brown Brothers Harriman’s (BBH) Elias Haddad reports the Bank of Canada (BoC) kept its policy rate at 2.25% for a fifth consecutive meeting and signaled no urgency to hike despite two-way optionality. With markets pricing 50 bps of hikes over twelve months, Haddad judges the swaps curve too aggressive and sees risk that USD/CAD grinds up toward 1.4140.

Market pricing seen too aggressive on hikes

"Yesterday, the Bank of Canada (BOC) left the policy rate on hold at 2.25% for a fifth straight meeting. The decision was widely expected. BOC reiterated its two-way policy optionality introduced in April that new US trade restrictions on Canada would argue for cuts, but persistently high energy prices could warrant “consecutive increases in the policy rate.”"

"Nonetheless, the statement suggests the BOC is in no rush to start raising rates. BOC pointed out “the economy is expected to remain in excess supply” and “So far, there has been limited evidence of broad-based pass-through of higher energy prices to other consumer prices.”"

"Bottom line: the swaps curve is too aggressive pricing in 50bps of BOC rate hikes in the next twelve months. Risk is USD/CAD grinds up to 1.4140 (November 2025 high) as the swaps curve adjusts lower."

(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)

Japanese Yen: Pressure persists toward 162 against US Dollar – Scotiabank

Scotiabank strategists Shaun Osborne and Eric Theoret report USD/JPY is steady but elevated, with recent gains already surpassing prior intervention-trigger levels. A 25 bps Bank of Japan (BoJ) hike on Tuesday is widely anticipated, and markets price nearly one more increase by December.
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Bank of Japan: Gradual normalisation with higher JGB yields – ING

ING’s Min Joo Kang expects the Bank of Japan to deliver a 25bp rate hike in June, supported by resilient growth, negative real rates and upside inflation risks. Despite soft May inflation, underlying pressures and firm wages justify further normalisation.
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