Japan spent record of nearly $20.0 billion on intervention to support 
		the yen
						
		 
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		 [September 30, 2022]  
		By Leika Kihara and Tetsushi Kajimoto 
		 
		TOKYO (Reuters) -Japan spent up a record 
		2.8 trillion yen ($19.7 billion) intervening in the foreign exchange 
		market last week to prop up the yen, Ministry of Finance data showed on 
		Friday, draining nearly 15% of funds it has readily available for 
		intervention. 
		 
		The figure was less than the 3.6 trillion yen estimated by Tokyo money 
		market brokers for Japan's first dollar-selling, yen-buying intervention 
		in 24 years to stem the currency's sharp weakening. 
		 
		The ministry's figure, indicating total spending on currency 
		intervention from Aug. 30 to Sept. 28, is widely believed to have been 
		used entirely for the Sept. 22 intervention. It would surpass the 
		previous record for dollar-selling, yen-buying intervention in 1998 of 
		2.62 trillion yen. Confirmation on the dates of the spending will be 
		released in November. 
		  
						
		
		  
						
		 
		"This was a big burst of intervention, if it had happened on a single 
		day, underscoring Japanese authorities' determination to defend the 
		yen," said Daisaku Ueno, chief forex strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan 
		Stanley Securities. 
		 
		"But the impact of further intervention will diminish as long as Japan 
		continues to intervene solo," he said. 
		 
		The intervention, conducted after the yen slumped to a 24-year low of 
		nearly 146 to the dollar, triggered a sharp bounce of more than 5 yen 
		per dollar from that low, although the currency has since drifted down 
		again to around 144.25. 
		 
		"Recent sharp, one-sided yen declines heighten uncertainty by making it 
		difficult for companies to set business plans. It's therefore 
		undesirable and bad for the economy," Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko 
		Kuroda was quoted as saying at a meeting with cabinet ministers on 
		Friday. 
		 
		
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            Banknotes of Japanese yen are seen in 
			this illustration picture taken September 23, 2022. REUTERS/Florence 
			Lo/Illustration/File Photo 
            
			
			  
            Japan held roughly $1.3 trillion in reserves, the second biggest 
			after China, of which $135.5 billion was held as deposits parked 
			with foreign central banks and the Bank for International 
			Settlements (BIS), according to foreign reserves data released on 
			Sept. 7. Those deposits can easily be tapped to finance further 
			dollar-selling, yen-buying intervention. 
			 
			"Even if it were to intervene again, Japan likely won't have to sell 
			U.S. Treasury bills and instead tap this deposit for the time 
			being," said Izuru Kato, chief economist at Totan Research, a 
			think-tank arm of a major money market brokerage firm in Tokyo. 
			 
			If the deposits dry up, Japan would need to dip into its securities 
			holdings sized around $1.04 trillion. 
			 
			Of the main types of foreign assets Japan holds, deposits and 
			securities are the most liquid and can be converted into cash 
			immediately. 
			 
			Other holdings include gold, reserves at the International Monetary 
			Fund (IMF) and IMF special drawing rights (SDRs), although procuring 
			dollar funds from these assets would take time, analysts say. 
			 
			($1 = 144.4000 yen) 
			 
			(Reporting by Leika Kihara and Tetsushi Kajimoto; Editing by Sam 
			Holmes, Edmund Klamann & Shri Navaratnam) 
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