Japan intervened, buying yen in foreign exchange market Friday -sources
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[October 22, 2022] By
Shinji Kitamura and Yoshifumi Takemoto
TOKYO (Reuters) -Japan intervened in the
foreign exchange market on Friday to buy yen for the second time in a
month after the currency hit a 32-year low near 152 to the dollar, a
government official and another person familiar with the matter told
Reuters.
Japan has been attempting to shore up the battered currency as the
central bank sticks with ultra-low interest rates, countering a global
trend of tightening monetary policy and widening the gap between U.S.
and Japanese interest rates.
After the dollar rose to 151.94 yen, its highest since 1990, the
intervention drove the Japanese currency down more than 7 yen to a low
of 144.50 yen. The U.S. currency was last down 1.8% at 147.34 yen.
The Ministry of Finance (MOF) intervened in several stages from around
9:35 p.m. (1235 GMT), one source said.
"We are maintaining our stance of being ready to take appropriate action
against excessive forex volatility," Prime Minister Fumio Kishida told
reporters on Saturday after meeting with Australia's Anthony Albanese,
reiterating that such volatility could not be tolerated.
Kishida declined to comment further, saying, "I will not make any
detailed comments on forex" when asked about Friday's intervention.
Japan's top currency diplomat, Masato Kanda, also declined to say
whether the MOF had intervened.
"We won't comment now on whether or not we conducted an intervention,"
Kanda, the vice finance minister for international affairs, told Reuters
on Saturday, saying that this was a stance the MOF has stuck to over the
past several weeks.
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Silhouettes of passerby are see as they
walk past in front of an electric monitor displaying the exchange
rate between the Japanese yen against the U.S. dollar outside a
brokerage in Tokyo, Japan, October 21, 2022 REUTERS/Issei Kato
He added that the ministry would not confirm whether an intervention
had taken place for some time yet, signalling possible "stealth
intervention" to engage in a war of nerves against investors selling
the yen.
The MOF also bought yen on Sept. 22, as investors focussed on the
widening divergence between the BOJ's ultra-loose monetary policy
and the U.S. Federal Reserve's aggressive rate hikes.
Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki and Kanda have repeatedly signalled
the government's readiness to intervene, warning against excessive
volatility. Suzuki said before the intervention on Friday the
authorities were ready to act "strictly" against speculators.
Many market players doubt whether Tokyo can reverse the yen's
downtrend with solo intervention, even with Japan's $1.33 trillion
in foreign reserves.
The Group of Seven industrial powers agreed this month to closely
monitor recent volatility but stopped short of indicating they were
prepared for joint intervention.
Japan bought a record 3.6 trillion yen ($24 billion) in the
September action, Tokyo money market brokerage firms estimated.
($1 = 147.6400 yen)
(Reporting by Shinji Kitamura, Yoshifumi Takemoto, Tetsushi Kajimoto,
Kiyoshi Takenaka and Kentaro Sugiyama; Writing by Sakura Murakami
and Leika Kihara; Editing by William Mallard)
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