investingLive Asia-Pacific FX news wrap: Doubts over Islamabad talks this weekend

Summary:

  • Iran denies Islamabad talks, pushing back on WSJ report and linking talks to Lebanon ceasefire
  • Japan’s Katayama escalates FX rhetoric, flags readiness for intervention
  • Fed leadership timeline slips as Warsh hearing delayed → policy continuity
  • BoJ flags stagflation risk if Middle East shock persists
  • South Korea holds rates amid inflation-growth trade-off
  • China data confirms “bad inflation” dynamic (PPI up, CPI soft)
  • Markets steady: Asia equities firmer, USD slightly stronger, oil rangebound

Iranian state media denied that a delegation had arrived in Islamabad for weekend talks with the U.S., pushing back on earlier reporting and reiterating that Tehran has no plans to engage until a ceasefire is established in Lebanon. The denial reinforces the theme of conflicting signals around diplomacy, keeping uncertainty elevated despite the broader ceasefire backdrop.

In Japan, Finance Minister Katayama stepped up verbal intervention, warning authorities are prepared to act “on all fronts” against market moves, citing heightened speculative activity across crude oil and FX. The rhetoric signals growing discomfort with currency volatility, though no concrete measures were outlined.

On the Fed front, the Senate Banking Committee dropped plans for a hearing on nominee Kevin Warsh next week due to missing paperwork, effectively delaying the confirmation timeline. The development points to continued leadership continuity for now, removing a near-term policy uncertainty.

Central bank messaging across Asia continues to reflect the same core dilemma. Bank of Japan Deputy Governor Himino said Japan is not currently in stagflation but warned that a prolonged Middle East conflict could push up inflation while weighing on growth. Similarly, South Korea’s central bank held rates steady, maintaining a cautious stance as policymakers balance rising price pressures against downside risks to activity.

China’s latest data reinforced the emerging inflation narrative. Producer prices returned to growth (+0.5% y/y), ending a multi-year deflation streak, while consumer inflation undershot expectations (+1.0% y/y), highlighting the divergence between rising input costs and weak domestic demand.

Markets were relatively steady. Asia-Pacific equities were mostly firmer, extending gains seen on Wall Street following ceasefire optimism, despite sporadic flare-ups. The US dollar edged higher, while major pairs were broadly stable. Oil traded in a tight range and gold was little changed, suggesting markets remain in a holding pattern as geopolitical uncertainty persists.

This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.