Investing.com - The Australian dollar jumped after consumer prices came in at expectations on Wednesday while the yen was flatr against the dollar after a sharp swing to a surplus in Japan's trade balance in March.
In Japan, March trade data showed a surplus of ¥229.3 billion,a surge well above the ¥50.0 billion expected and the first surplus in 33 months. Exports rose 8.5%, matching expectations and imports declined 14.5%, more than the 12.8% fall seen.
USD/JPY traded at 119.67, flat. AUD/USD traded at 0.7765, up 073%, while EUR/USD changed hands at 1.0724, down 0.12%.
The March Westpac-MI leading index fell 0.28 of a point to 98, slipping the February index above-trend reading for the first time since January 2014.
Australia's first quarter CPI rose 0.2%, in line with expectations along with the annual pace of a gain of 1.3%.
The U.S. dollar index, which measures the greenback’s strength against a trade-weighted basket of six major currencies, was steady at 98.25, up 0.05%.
Overnight, the dollar was little changed against a basket of other major currencies in quiet trade on Tuesday, as the greenback continued to recover from the previous week's disappointing U.S. data.
The dollar regained some strength after a recent string of soft economic data dampened optimism on the U.S. recovery, adding to uncertainty over the timing of a rate hike.
The euro remained under pressure after the ZEW Centre for Economic Research said that its index of German economic sentiment declined by 1.5 points to 53.3 this month from March’s reading of 54.8. Analysts had expected the index to improve by 0.5 points to 55.3 in April.
However, the index of euro zone economic sentiment increased to a 14-month high of 64.8 in April from 62.4 in March, above forecasts for a gain to 63.7.
Sentiment on the single currency also remained fragile amid concerns that Athens is no closer to reaching an agreement on economic reforms for bailout funds with its creditors, fuelling fears that Greece could be forced out of the euro zone.