KEY POINTS
  • Asian currencies could be on the "backfoot" this year despite signals that the U.S. Federal Reserve will cut interest rates soon, according to JPMorgan's Julia Wang.
  • Wang said the U.S. dollar is expected to benefit from forecasts shifting to a soft landing for the economy rather than a recession. 
  • Other analysts have said that Asian currencies such as the Chinese yuan and Indian rupee could strengthen from interest rate cuts, with the Korean Won likely to be one of the major beneficiaries.

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The dollar was broadly steady on Monday as a soft U.S. jobs report boosted wagers that the Federal Reserve may still cut rates twice this year, while the yen was a tad weaker to start the week.

Asian currencies could be on the "back foot" this year despite signals that the U.S. Federal Reserve could cut interest rates soon, according to Julia Wang, executive director and global market strategist at JPMorgan Private Bank. 

Emerging market currencies often stand to gain when the Fed cuts interest rates and the U.S. dollar weakens.

In this article