
Yen, euro lifted by progress on trade
Tired of too many ads?
Remove Ads
Tired of too many ads?
Remove Ads
Tired of too many ads?
Remove Ads
The euro crept toward its highest level in nearly four years on Thursday while the yen held to gains following more progress on trade deals between the United States and its largest trading partners, which in turn lifted the broader market mood.The European Union and the U.S. are moving towards a trade agreement that could include a 15% U.S. baseline tariff on EU goods and possible exemptions, two European diplomats said on Wednesday.That came on the heels of Washington's trade deal with Tokyo that lowers tariffs on auto imports and spares the latter from punishing new levies on other goods in exchange for a $550 billion package of U.S.-bound investment and loans. Global markets took to the latest developments positively, as risk assets rallied and investors sold the U.S. dollar.The risk-sensitive Australian dollar rose to an eight-month high of $0.6604 early on Thursday.The euro steadied at $1.1768, hovering near a high of $1.1830 it hit earlier this month, which marked its strongest level in more than three years."These trade frameworks agreed between the U.S. and the major economies are definitely positive for risk sentiment," said Carol Kong, a currency strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia."We actually anticipated a risk of the U.S. and the European Union getting into retaliation mode ... but that risk of a retaliation seems to have dissipated."Against the yen, the dollar dipped 0.03% to 146.38, extending its fall against the Japanese currency to a fourth straight session.While news of Japan's trade deal has lit a fire under domestic stocks, gains in the yen have been capped by lingering political uncertainty at home.Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba denied on Wednesday he had decided to quit after a source and media reports said he planned to announce his resignation to take responsibility for a bruising upper house election defeat."In the near term, the yen will still face headwinds from ongoing political uncertainty. We still don't know what Prime Minister Ishiba will do ... so I think there is still some uncertainty with regard to the fiscal outlook in Japan and Bank of Japan policy," said Kong.Elsewhere, sterling was firm at $1.3582, after having gained 0.36% in the previous session.The dollar index was last little changed at 97.21, while the New Zealand dollar dipped 0.01% to $0.6046.Trade negotiations aside, markets will also be focused on a rate decision from the European Central Bank later in the day.Expectations are for policymakers to stand pat on rates, though markets will look out for what they say regarding the outlook for monetary policy . Investors generally expect one more ECB rate cut by the end of the year, most likely in December.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
37 minutes ago
- Time of India
India to maintain Russian oil imports despite Trump threats
India will keep purchasing oil from Russia despite US President Donald Trump's threats of penalties, two Indian government sources told Reuters on Saturday, not wishing to be identified due to the sensitivity of the matter. On top of a new 25 per cent tariff on India's exports to the US, Trump indicated in a Truth Social post last month that India would face additional penalties for purchases of Russian arms and oil. On Friday, Trump told reporters he had heard that India would no longer be buying oil from Russia. But the sources said there would be no immediate changes. "These are long-term oil contracts," one of the sources said. "It is not so simple to just stop buying overnight." Justifying India's oil purchases from Russia, a second source said India's imports of Russian grades had helped avoid a global surge in oil prices, which have remained subdued despite Western curbs on the Russian oil sector. Unlike Iranian and Venezuelan oil, Russian crude is not subject to direct sanctions, and India is buying it below the current price cap fixed by the European Union, the source said. The New York Times also quoted two unnamed senior Indian officials on Saturday as saying there had been no change in Indian government policy. Indian government authorities did not respond to Reuters' request for official comment on its oil purchasing intentions. However, during a regular press briefing on Friday, foreign ministry spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal said India has a "steady and time-tested partnership" with Russia. "On our energy sourcing requirements ... we look at what is there available in the markets, what is there on offer, and also what is the prevailing global situation or circumstances," he said. The White House did not immediately respond to requests for comment. India's top supplier Trump, who has made ending Russia's war in Ukraine a priority of his administration since returning to office this year, has expressed growing impatience with Russian President Vladimir Putin in recent weeks. He has threatened 100 per cent tariffs on US imports from countries that buy Russian oil unless Moscow reaches a major peace deal with Ukraine. Russia is the leading supplier to India, the world's third-largest oil importer and consumer, accounting for about 35 per cent of its overall supplies. India imported about 1.75 million barrels per day of Russian oil from January to June this year, up 1 per cent from a year ago, according to data provided to Reuters by sources. But while the Indian government may not be deterred by Trump's threats, sources told Reuters this week that Indian state refiners stopped buying Russian oil after July discounts narrowed to their lowest since 2022 - when sanctions were first imposed on Moscow - due to lower Russian exports and steady demand. Indian Oil Corp, Hindustan Petroleum Corp , Bharat Petroleum Corp and Mangalore Refinery Petrochemical Ltd have not sought Russian crude in the past week or so, four sources told Reuters. Nayara Energy - a refinery majority-owned by Russian entities, including oil major Rosneft, and major buyer of Russian oil - was recently sanctioned by the EU. Nayara's chief executive resigned following the sanctions, and three vessels laden with oil products from Nayara Energy have yet to discharge their cargoes, hindered by the new EU sanctions, Reuters reported last week.


Hindustan Times
an hour ago
- Hindustan Times
Bengaluru's twin tunnel project to use slurry boring machines for excavation: Report
Plans for Bengaluru's new twin tunnel road, which will link Hebbal's Esteem Mall Junction and Silk Board Junction, will rely on slurry tunnel boring machines (TBMs) to do the heavy digging. A Tunnel Boring Machine (TBM). (Representative image)(PTI) The organization overseeing the project, B-SMILE, opted not to use hard rock TBMs — machines generally preferred when excavating through areas riddled with boulders. Their decision comes after evaluating the city's subsurface, which blends both stones and softer soil, making slurry TBMs a better fit for the job. ALSO READ | Bengaluru resident questions city's liveability after 9 years: 'We're all just surviving' BS Prahlad, the project's technical director, shared that lessons from an earlier tunnel build in Mumbai pushed the team toward slurry-based machines this time around, according to The Hindu. ALSO READ | L&T terminated Corridor-2, Corridor-4 contracts of suburban rail project illegally: K-RIDE For the twin tunnel project, a total of eight tunnel boring machines will be brought in, starting work from five or six launch sites along the nearly 17-kilometre route. The massive venture is structured under a Build, Own, Operate, and Transfer (BOOT) model, which means successful bidders will be responsible for acquiring and managing the machinery, whether they import or locally assemble the TBMs themselves, the report stated. Past tunnel work in Bengaluru — like the Namma Metro — has achieved boring rates between 1.6 and 2 kilometres per year using similar technologies. The exact pace on this project will ultimately depend on the ground composition encountered during the drilling process. As part of the tendering process, the government is providing borewell survey information, but insists that detailed site investigation and analysis will be the winning bidder's responsibility. ALSO READ | Japanese man compares Bengaluru airport to a luxury hotel: 'Never seen anything like this before' The twin tunnel itself, spanning roughly 16.7 kilometres, aims to ease congestion by providing a new north-south route beneath the city's surface. Geological experts say the use of slurry TBMs may also help fill and secure natural fractures in Bengaluru's ancient, complex underground rock, some parts of which date back several billion years.


Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
Who is Andrew Tulloch? Former OpenAI engineer and Mira Murati's co-founder who rejected a $1.5 billion offer from Mark Zuckerberg
Andrew Tulloch, an Australian computer scientist and machine learning expert, has made headlines after turning down a $1.5 billion offer from Mark Zuckerberg to rejoin Meta. A former OpenAI engineer, Tulloch is now the co-founder of Thinking Machines Lab alongside ex-OpenAI CTO Mira Murati. The AI startup, still in its early stages, is already valued at $12 billion. Tulloch's decision to decline Zuckerberg's aggressive recruitment attempt reflects a broader trend of top AI talent prioritizing independence, mission-driven work, and long-term impact over staggering financial packages. Andrew Tulloch: From Wall Street to the frontier of AI Tulloch's journey began at the University of Sydney, where he graduated with first-class honours and a University Medal in mathematics. He later earned a Master's in Mathematical Statistics from Cambridge and pursued a PhD at UC Berkeley. Tulloch worked at Meta (then Facebook) from 2012 to 2023, contributing to machine learning systems and the development of PyTorch. He joined OpenAI in 2023, focusing on GPT-4 pretraining and reasoning models, before co-founding Thinking Machines Lab in early 2025. Co-founded with Mira Murati, Thinking Machines Lab is focused on building AI systems that are safer, interpretable, and customizable—going beyond traditional chatbot interfaces. The startup, though yet to release a product, has secured a $2 billion seed round with backing from Andreessen Horowitz, Nvidia, AMD, and Google Cloud. Its ambition and leadership have made it a top target for recruitment, especially from Zuckerberg's new "superintelligence" division at Meta. Mark Zuckerberg's offer and Tulloch's viral rejection According to The Wall Street Journal, Zuckerberg personally tried to lure Tulloch back to Meta with a six-year offer worth up to $1.5 billion, contingent on bonuses and stock performance. Tulloch declined, joining other Thinking Machines Lab co-founders in resisting Meta's poaching attempts. The bold rejection has gone viral, with Tulloch's LinkedIn profile celebrated for charting a rare career driven by principles rather than payouts. Meta later disputed the exact terms of the offer but confirmed outreach efforts were made.