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The US Dollar (via DXY Index) has given up earlier gains as traders continued to digest the ramifications of US President Trump’s tariff announcement late last week. With Canada, Mexico, and now Australia exempted from the aluminum and steel tariffs, it’s increasingly looking like the plan is more ‘bark’ than ‘bite.’ That said, a number of other countries and economic regions, like China and the Eurozone, haven’t been granted exemptions and the prospect of a global trade war remains.

Accordingly, with negative trade headlines out of the United States cooling off a bit, and in consideration of the exceptionally light economic calendar on Monday, traders’ attention has turned to domestic developments out of Japan and the United Kingdom as the top drivers for FX markets on Monday.

WILL A SCANDAL SINK ABENOMICS?

A potential scandal has emerged close to Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, leading to speculation over whether or not the vaunted ‘Abenomics’ program – a cornerstone of which is a weak Japanese Yen – will remain in place. Taro Aso, the Japanese Finance Minister, is said to have altered documents to remove his and Abe’s names from documents relating to the sale of public land to a school.

While FM Aso has strongly refused to resign, it is not a far stretch to believe that an erosion in trust with the current government may lead to its current policies being drawn into question. Implicitly, this would mean less support for the weak JPY policy.

Price Chart 1: USD/JPY Daily Timeframe (March 2017 to March 2018)

USD/JPY Downtrend Remains; Potential Pennant in GBP/USD

The timing of the potentially JPY-positive news comes as USD/JPY tests the daily 21-EMA, which has been the backbone of the downtrend in place since early-January. While a breakthrough said moving average wouldn’t mark the end of weakness – price remains on the downside of the 52-week range that defined 2017 – it would constitute a shift in the outlook from USD/JPY from ‘bearish’ to ‘neutral.’