Yen keeps sinking, will Tokyo intervene again?
Japanese yen loses over 13% this year as interest rate differentials widen
Risk of another round of FX intervention is rising, but at what point?
Trend reversal is a story for next year - for now, outlook remains negative
Yen sinks despite favorable newsThe Japanese yen remains the ‘sick man’ of the FX market. It almost touched a three-decade low against the US dollar this week, falling back to levels that prompted Tokyo to intervene in the FX market last year to defend the currency. Interest rate differentials have been the driving force behind this relentless selling. The Bank of Japan has refused to raise rates, keeping them in negative territory even as foreign central banks like the Fed have raised their own rates to 5% or beyond. This enormous gap has seen capital leave Japan, searching for higher returns abroad. High energy prices have also inflicted damage on the yen through the trade channel. Since Japan imports nearly all its oil and gas, the nation has been forced to pay more for its energy in recent years, which has deprived the yen from the trade surplus it has historically enjoyed.



Similarly, there’s a chance the BoJ abandons yield curve control. This is the strategy that has crippled the yen, so scrapping it could help revitalize the currency. Whether that happens will depend on the wage negotiations and how the economic landscape evolves, but with the government preparing a heavy spending package to boost growth, the chances seem high. How cheap the currency has become on a purchasing power parity basis is another argument in favor of an eventual recovery in the yen.
All told, even though the near-term fortunes for the yen seem bleak, keeping the risk of intervention alive, the bigger picture looks more promising in an environment where interest rate differentials compress next year. The yen’s epic downtrend might be approaching its finale.Related Assets
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