Analysis-'It's a car with broken brakes': investors see unrelenting yen
descent
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[September 16, 2022]
By Kevin Buckland and Rae Wee
TOKYO/SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Japan's threats
of currency intervention might slow but not stop the yen from hurtling
towards three-decade lows before the year end, market analysts and fund
managers say.
The yen has already lost more than 20% of its value this year to reach a
24-year trough at 144.99 per dollar last week, including a more than 7%
tumble over the past month alone.
While it found brief respite after the Bank of Japan purportedly made
rare checks on market levels this week, which is seen as a precursor to
possible direct intervention, most banks and analysts expect the slide
will continue.
They say the yen could soon hit a 32-year low of 150 per dollar or
beyond as the Bank of Japan (BOJ) stays isolated in its uber-dovish
policy stance while its global peers hike rates aggressively to battle
inflation.
The BOJ's next policy update comes on Thursday, when it is mostly
expected to press on with its yield curve control policies that pin the
short-term rate at -0.1% and the 10-year yield around zero via massive
bond-purchases.
Heightening the contrast with other developed markets, the decision will
come a day after the U.S. Federal Reserve's latest rate-setting
announcement, with traders fully pricing another 75 basis-point hike
that will take rates there above 3%.
Such a dynamic is destined to keep the yen falling, and the fact that it
is "super-undervalued" already on many metrics means nothing until the
BOJ shifts policy, said Tohru Sasaki, head of Japan markets research at
J.P. Morgan Securities in Tokyo.
"We're riding in a car down a slope with broken brakes... unless we fix
the brakes, it will just keep going down," Sasaki said. "There is no
reason to think the yen will stop at 145 or 150 as long as all the
fundamental factors remain the same."
Masayuki Kichikawa, chief macro strategist at Sumitomo Mitsui Asset
Management, agrees that a dovish BOJ will imply a persistently weak yen.
"Once the dollar crosses the 145 yen line, the next target should be
150", he said.
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Men look at an electric monitor
displaying the Japanese yen exchange rate against the U.S. dollar
and Nikkei share average in Tokyo, Japan September 14, 2022.
REUTERS/Issei Kato
The BOJ is the last remaining dove among the Group of 10 central banks. New
Zealand's Reserve Bank was one of the first out of the gate nearly a year ago
and even holdouts like the Swiss National Bank have tightened policy.
To be sure, Japan's economic situation is different. Prices are rising, but
mainly due to energy costs and exacerbated by the weak currency. Wage growth
remains tepid, and consumer inflation just above the BOJ's 2% target contrasts
with 8.3% in the United States and around 10% in Britain.
BARK VS BITE ON INTERVENTION
The hurdle for the BOJ to actually buy yen to strengthen it is high, with
analysts expecting Japan will not find any backing for that cause from U.S.
authorities or other major central banks.
Shinichiro Kadota, senior FX strategist at Barclays, says the United States will
be loath to join any intervention, given it needs a strong dollar to tame
inflation at home.
Barclays, though, sees the yen gradually recovering toward 130 next year as U.S.
inflation peaks and the Fed slows the pace of tightening. But it all depends on
the Fed, with the BOJ's policy stasis rendering it just a passenger.
"The Fed is driving, and the BOJ is in the back seat," Kadota said.
Japan's biggest bank, Nomura, agrees that the Fed is the focus for dollar-yen
traders.
"The yen only stops falling when the Fed stops hiking rates in my view," said
Naka Matsuzawa, Nomura's chief Japan macro strategist, who sees 150 as the yen's
next target.
"The BOJ won't even consider normalising policy before knowing where the Fed
stops, and whether the global economy can avoid a recession."
(Reporting by Kevin Buckland and Rae Wee; Editing by Vidya Ranganathan and Kim
Coghill)
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