Japan ramps up intervention threats after yen slides past key 150 level
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[October 20, 2022] By
Leika Kihara and Daniel Leussink
TOKYO (Reuters) -Japanese policymakers made
fresh threats of intervention on Thursday after the yen tumbled past the
key psychological level of 150 to the dollar, keeping investors on high
alert in case Tokyo steps into markets again to support the fragile
currency.
After the yen's first break beyond the symbolic mark since 1990, top
currency diplomat Masato Kanda told reporters that authorities were
"always ready to take necessary action as excessive volatility has
become increasingly unacceptable."
Kanda, vice finance minister for international affairs, said he will not
comment on whether Japan was intervening now or have stepped into the
currency market earlier on Thursday.
The breach of the closely watched level heightens pressure for Tokyo to
step into the currency market again to rein in the yen's relentless
decline, which is adding to the country's already swelling import bill.
It also puts the Bank of Japan (BOJ) in the spotlight ahead of a policy
meeting next week, when it is widely expected to maintain its ultra-low
interest rates that are blamed for pushing down the yen.
Japanese Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki also told reporters after the
yen's latest slide that he will "take decisive action" against
excessive, sharp yen moves.
"We cannot tolerate excessive, rapid currency market moves driven by
speculative action," Suzuki said. "We will continue to watch currency
moves meticulously and with a sense of urgency," he said. Suzuki said he
won't comment on specific yen levels.
The yen's break of 150 against the dollar took it to its weakest level
since August 1990. It last traded at 149.770.
LONG SLIDE
The dollar has surged some 30% against the yen this year, despite Japan
spending up to a record 2.8 trillion yen ($19.7 billion) intervening in
the foreign exchange market in September to support its currency.
"It's a big psychological level that could trigger intervention ...
people have been anticipating intervention for a while," Moh Siong Sum,
currency strategist at Bank of Singapore, said of the 150 to the dollar
threshold.
"People are going to look over their shoulders for a while and see
whether there's any action (intervention) or not. If not, they're going
to push it further, higher. That's how the market goes. The next
resistance I see would be around the 153 level."
The BOJ, for its part, ramped up efforts to defend its 0% bond yield cap
earlier on Thursday with offers of emergency bond buying. Its dovish
governor, Haruhiko Kuroda, has repeatedly ruled out the chance of
raising the bank's ultra-low rates to moderate the yen's downtrend.
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Banknotes of Japanese yen are seen in
this illustration picture taken September 23, 2022. REUTERS/Florence
Lo/Illustration/File Photo
The central bank's step underscores the dilemma Tokyo faces in
trying to contain unwelcome yen falls, without resorting to interest
rate hikes that could derail Japan's fragile recovery.
The Ministry of Finance's dollar-selling, yen-buying intervention
last month was the first time authorities had acted in the markets
to prop up the yen since 1998.
Japanese policymakers have signalled that they were watching the
speed of yen moves, rather than targeting a specific level, in
deciding whether to intervene.
While market worries about intervention have slowed the pace of yen
falls, analysts expect the currency to remain on a downtrend as long
as the BOJ remains a dovish outlier among a global wave of central
banks hiking rates, including the U.S. Federal Reserve.
"With the Fed still in tightening mode and interest rates certain to
be raised further, versus the BoJ continuing to pursue a completely
opposite ultra loose monetary policy ... the dollar was always going
to continue its appreciation against the yen," said Stuart Cole,
head macro economist at Equiti Capital in London.
"I think there are too many supply-side issues that need to be
overcome and so far there are very few signs that Japan is serious
about tackling them. So, the ultra-loose monetary stance looks set
to continue indefinitely."
The BOJ faces renewed challenges in keeping long-term interest rates
stably low with its policy dubbed yield curve control (YCC), under
which it pumps money aggressively to cap the 10-year bond yield
around 0%.
The central bank conducted emergency bond-buying operations on
Thursday, as rising global yields pushed the 10-year Japanese
government bond (JGB) yield above its implicit 0.25% cap for the
second straight day.
Once welcomed for the competitive boost it gives exports, the weak
yen has become a headache for policymakers as it inflates the costs
of already expensive imported fuel and raw materials, putting more
pressure on businesses and households.
($1 = 149.8700 yen)
(Reporting by Leika Kihara and Daniel Leussink; Additional reporting
by Kevin Buckland, Sakura Murakami, Kantaro Komiya, Tetsushi
Kajimoto in TOKYO and Bansari Mayur Kamdar in BENGALURU; Editing by
Chang-Ran Kim, Sam Holmes and Kim Coghill)
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