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Forex

Explainer-Why is the Japanese yen so weak?

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SINGAPORE (Reuters) – Japan’s yen is at three-decade lows and under enough pressure to prompt strong official warnings of intervention to prop it up.

The yen has fallen despite Japan’s first interest rate hike since 2007 and optimism about the economy. It traded at 153.24 per dollar on April 10, its weakest since 1990 and in real terms it is at its weakest since at least the 1970s.

A weaker yen is a boon for Japanese exporters’ profits, and for tourists visiting Japan who find their currencies going further, but it squeezes households by increasing import costs.

Here are some of the reasons for the slide:

RATES

Interest rates and momentum are powerful forces in foreign exchange markets. Both are against the yen. The yen has been steadily falling for more than three years and has lost about a third of its value since the start of 2021.

The yen is also the lowest-rate, or yielding, G10 currency. That means investors are borrowing it cheaply and selling it to invest in higher-yielding currencies, driving its price down.

These deals, known as a “carry trades” are particularly attractive when broader market volatility is low, as it is right now, as the fundamental rate difference drives markets.

Short-term Japanese rates are held below 0.1% and are not expected to rise much further.

Short-term U.S. rates are at 5.25-5.5% and a U.S. rate cut isn’t expected until September or November.

The U.S.-Japan government bond yield gap at the 10-year tenor is almost 370 bps.

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Japan’s central bank made a historic shift out of negative interest rates in March. But the move was so well advertised, and has not put future sharp hikes on the table, leaving investors comfortable to add to short yen positions.

Yen shorts, by value, hit a decade high in April.

The rates picture is also keeping big Japanese investors’ cash abroad, where it can earn better returns.

Japan Post Bank and Japan Post Insurance, among the largest financial firms, told Reuters their portfolios won’t be radically changing in response to the BOJ’s policy shift.

RESPONSE

The yen’s dollar exchange rate has broken the level that drew intervention in 2022 and markets are on edge about the potential for government yen buying in support of the currency.

Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki pledged “decisive action” against speculative moves late in March, language that preceded previous yen-buying intervention. Traders are now focused on the 153 to 155 range as an intervention red zone.

REAL TERMS

A real effective exchange rate index value of 70.25 for the yen in February is the lowest since the Bank of International Settlements’ records began in 1994 and lower than any of the Bank of Japan’s retrospective projections, which date to 1970.

That means tourist dollars go further than they have for generations and has tourism booming. Japan’s current account has been in surplus for 13 months with help from tourism income and February’s 2.79 million visitors was a record for the month.

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Japanese Yen and U.S. dollar banknotes are seen in this illustration taken March 10, 2023. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

Domestic consumption, however, has been a weak spot in Japan’s fragile economic recovery as households tend to be net importers and face higher prices due to a weak yen.

Beyond Japan, some analysts say the yen’s weakness threatens to erode the competitive advantage of Chinese manufactures, and speculate it could be behind recent falls in the yuan – though authorities in China maintain a close grip on the currency.

Forex

Yen surges on suspected intervention, 160 seen as key level

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By Kevin Buckland, Tetsushi Kajimoto and Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss

TOKYO/NEW YORK (Reuters) -The yen surged against the dollar in early Asian hours on Thursday on what traders suspected was another round of intervention by Japanese authorities to stop a sharp slide in the currency, with the 160 level seen as a key line of defence.

The dollar tumbled to precisely 153 yen from about 157.55 yen for reasons that were not immediately clear, but traders and analysts were quick to attribute it to dollar selling ordered by Japan’s Ministry of Finance to support a currency languishing at 34-year lows.

The latest move came in a quiet period for the currency pair, after the U.S. stock market had closed and with the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy meeting ending hours earlier.

The dollar was already on the back foot after Fed Chair Jerome Powell confirmed that the central bank’s bias was towards interest rate cuts, even if the timing has been delayed by sticky inflation.

“There’s no doubt the MOF intervened,” said Daisaku Ueno, chief currency strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ (NYSE:) Morgan Stanley Securities, who says officials have set 160 yen per dollar as their “final defence line.”

“This morning’s intervention is proof that Japanese authorities will intervene any time of the day, and any day of the year,” he added. “They will continue to intervene.”

Bank of Japan money market projections for cash balances later showed more than 9 trillion yen ($57.96 billion) discrepancy with broker expectations. It suggests intervention around that size – which would mark a new record – though factors other than foreign exchange intervention can influence money market balances.

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Additionally, Columbia University academic and former finance ministry executive Takatoshi Ito told Reuters it was plausible Japanese authorities intervened to signal they see 160 yen to the dollar as their line in the sand.

The yen has been under pressure as U.S. interest rates have climbed and Japan’s have stayed near zero, driving cash out of yen and into higher-yielding assets.

The pressure has intensified since March as expectations for Fed rate cuts receded, reinforcing the yen’s status as a cheap funding currency.

When contacted by Reuters, Japan’s vice finance minister for international affairs, Masato Kanda, who oversees currency policy, said he had no comment on whether Japan had intervened in the market.

A U.S. Treasury spokesperson also declined to comment on the move in the currency pair.

Yellen told Reuters last week that currency interventions were acceptable only in “very rare and exceptional circumstances” when markets were disorderly with excessive volatility.

CHALLENGING

The difficulty in arresting the yen’s slide has been made clear by the speed at which the currency has reversed direction after its spike.

As of 1000 GMT, the yen was 0.5% lower at 155.23 per dollar, giving up some of the ground it gained overnight.

And it remains down about 10% against the dollar this year amid receding bets for near-term Fed rate cuts, while the Bank of Japan has signalled it will go slow with further policy tightening after its first rate hike since 2007 in March.

The gap between long-term government bond yields in the two countries is a yawning 376 basis points, which helped push the yen to the weakest since April 1990 at 160.245 per dollar on Monday. Official data earlier this week suggested a sharp rebound that followed was due to Japanese intervention totalling about $35 billion, close to a record amount. The finance ministry has consistently declined to say whether it was behind the move.

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($1 = 155.2900 yen)

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Yen pares some of sharp rise after suspected intervention, dollar steady

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By Samuel Indyk and Kevin Buckland

LONDON (Reuters) -The yen fell slightly against the dollar on Thursday, reversing direction after a sudden surge late on Wednesday that traders and analysts were quick to attribute to intervention by Japanese authorities.

The yen was 0.4% lower at 155.18 per dollar as of 1055 GMT, retracing about half of its late Wednesday surge from around 157.55 to exactly 153 over a period of about 30 minutes.

The sharp move on Wednesday came in a quiet period for markets after Wall Street had closed, and hours after the U.S. Federal Reserve had wrapped up its policy meeting.

The dollar was already on the back foot as Fed Chair Jerome Powell confirmed the central bank’s easing bias, even as he reiterated that sticky inflation meant interest rate cuts may be a while in coming.

“It signals to markets that they are willing to go at any time, day or night,” said Jane Foley, head of forex strategy at Rabobank.

“It shows authorities are very cognizant about the conditions as when they moved the dollar was already on the backfoot because Powell was not as hawkish as he could have been.”

Japan’s vice finance minister for international affairs, Masato Kanda, who oversees currency policy at the MOF, told Reuters he had no comment on whether Japan had intervened in the market.

The dollar remains up more than 10% against the yen this year, as traders push back expectations on the timing of a first Fed rate cut, while the Bank of Japan has signalled it will go slow with further policy tightening after raising rates in March for the first time since 2007.

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INTERVENTION?

The gap between long-term government bond yields in the two countries is 371 basis points. That helped lift the dollar to a 34-year peak of 160.245 yen on Monday and also spurred a sharp reversal, which official data suggested was because of Japanese intervention totalling about $35 billion.

The Bank of Japan’s official data on Thursday indicated Japan may have spent a further 3.66 trillion yen ($23.59 billion) on Wednesday in its attempt to shore up the currency.

“I don’t think intervention alone can cap dollar-yen,” said Niels Christensen, chief analyst at Nordea.

“The Bank of Japan continues to be reluctant to move the key rate higher, which is one reason why I expect the market to test the upside in dollar-yen.”

The , which measures the currency against the yen, euro, sterling and three other major peers, was little changed at 105.72 on Thursday, following a 0.6% retreat on Wednesday from near six-month highs.

The euro was down 0.1% at $1.0705, after climbing 0.5% in the previous session.

Sterling slipped 0.1% to $1.2513, paring back some of Wednesday’s 0.3% rise.

As widely expected, the Fed held rates steady on Wednesday and Powell stressed it “will take longer than previously expected” for policymakers to become comfortable that inflation will resume the decline towards their 2% target. At the same time, he characterized the risk of more hikes as “unlikely.”

“There was a collective sigh of relief in the financial markets after the Fed refrained from increasing its hawkishness,” said Jack Mclntyre, portfolio manager for global fixed income and related strategies at Brandywine Global.

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“Think of this outlook as ‘high for longer’ as opposed to ‘higher for longer.’ The latter implies rate hikes, which is not today’s story.”

Hotter-than-forecast Swiss inflation in April drove the Swiss franc higher against both the euro and dollar.

“The probability of another cut (from the Swiss National Bank) in June is a little less likely but I think they will still be quite pleased with the inflation situation,” Nordea’s Christensen said.

“I would still expect another cut in June, especially if the European Central Bank also cuts rates next month.”

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Dollar stabilizes after Powell speech; labor market data in focus

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Investing.com – The U.S. dollar stabilized Thursday after a sharp overnight drop in the wake of Fed Chair Jerome Powell ruling out any rate hikes, while the Japanese yen was volatile amid intervention talk.

At 06:00 ET (10:00 GMT), the Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six other currencies, traded 0.1% higher at 105.645, after falling 0.6% overnight. 

Powell rules out further rate hikes

The kept interest rates unchanged at the conclusion of its latest policy-setting meeting on Wednesday, as widely expected, with Fed Chair acknowledging that fighting inflation was taking longer than expected.

However, he largely ruled out interest rate hikes this year, which surprised the dollar bulls given recent stronger-than-expected inflation data.

“While the Committee added a hawkish acknowledgment of the ‘lack of further progress’ on inflation so far this year to its statement, Chair Powell offered a dovish message in his press conference,” economists at Goldman Sachs said, in a note.

“We have left our forecast unchanged and continue to expect two rate cuts this year in July and November,” they added.

Economic data is going to be studied even more closely now, as Powell emphasized the need to be data-dependent, and there are weekly due for release later in the session.

However, the first key data point arrives on Friday, with the closely watched U.S. employment report. 

are expected to have risen 243,000 in April, a drop from just over 300,000 the prior month, but still indicative of a healthy labor market.

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Eurozone manufacturing still weak

In Europe, traded 0.1% lower to 1.0699, after data showing that the eurozone’s manufacturing sector remains in the doldrums.

The final eurozone , compiled by S&P Global, fell to 45.7 in April from March’s 46.1, below the 50 mark denoting growth in activity for a 22nd month.

The bloc’s economy recovered last quarter from a mild recession and expanded 0.3% quarter-on-quarter in January-March, official data showed earlier in the week, but any further growth is unlikely to come from the region’s manufacturing sector any time soon.

traded 0.1% lower to 1.2509, trading in a tight range, with the next economic data release of note being Friday’s .

This is expected to show an increase to 54.9 in April, from 53.1 the prior month, suggesting that the U.K.’s dominant services industry remains in a healthy state, potentially offering the Bank of England room to delay interest rate cuts.

Yen volatile; more intervention at work?

In Asia, rose 0.5% to 155.26, with the pair making something of a recovery after it suddenly fell more than 3% on Wednesday from late Tuesday levels, prompting talk of more intervention by the Japanese authorities to support the yen.

The USDJPY pair had tumbled from 160 on Monday, which traders said was the new line in the sand for Japan when it came to yen weakness. But the factors weighing on the yen – chiefly a dovish Bank of Japan and a wide gap between local and U.S. rates – are expected to remain in play, limiting the effect of government intervention.  

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Broader Asian currencies moved in a flat-to-low range, with the pair up 0.1% at 0.6531 even as data showed the country’s shrank to an over three-year low in March. 

 

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