By Tom Westbrook

SINGAPORE (Reuters) – Commodity currencies touched multi-week lows on Wednesday tracking weakness in Chinese demand, while the yen has surged as short-sellers bail out ahead of a central bank meeting.

Purchasing managers’ index figures will be particularly watched in Europe later in the session to see whether they support bets on two European rate cuts by the end of January.

The euro held at $1.0848 in Asia trade and sterling, which could rally if PMIs in Britain surprise to the upside and reduce bets on rate cuts, bought $1.2901.

Markets price a 44% chance of a 10 basis point rate hike in Japan next week and speculators, having also been rumbled by a few rounds of suspected currency intervention from Japan, are closing what had been profitable “carry trades” funded in yen.

Dollar/yen fell nearly 1% to 155.55 overnight and traded nearby at 155.78 early in the Asia session.

Moves in other pairs were even larger, with the euro dropping 1.3% on the yen overnight and hitting a five-week low of 168.79 yen in Asia. Mexico’s high-yielding peso dropped 2% on the yen overnight and the Australian dollar is down almost 6% on the yen in two weeks.

“The yen was super, super cheap,” said BNZ senior strategist Jason Wong in Wellington. “But with intervention, lots and lots of short position (holders) are taking money off the table ahead of the Bank of Japan meeting next week.”

Falls in oil, iron ore and prices as well as a ripple of risk aversion in equities have dragged currencies such as the Australian, New Zealand and Canadian dollars down on the U.S. dollar.

The touched a five-week low just below $0.6612 in early trade on Wednesday. The New Zealand dollar hovered near Tuesday’s two-and-a-half month low of $0.5951.

Chinese growth figures missed forecasts last week and surprise rate cuts on Monday have drawn attention to a lacklustre outlook for raw material demand, weighing bellwether commodities such as iron ore and copper to three-month lows on Wednesday.

The Canadian dollar made a six-week low of C$1.3787 per dollar ahead of a central bank meeting later on Wednesday where markets have priced an 84% chance of a 25 basis point rate cut.

At 104.5 the was close to a two-week high. was steady at 7.2909 in offshore trade.

Further ahead traders are waiting on U.S. GDP and core PCE data due later in the week to test expectations for two U.S. rate cuts over the rest of this year. Next week’s second-quarter inflation data in Australia will be crucial for pricing the risk of another interest rate hike.

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