Japanese yen slides back towards 34-year low after brief spike
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[April 26, 2024] By
Joice Alves
LONDON (Reuters) - The yen fell on Friday and was trading around its
weakest level in three decades, having briefly spiked against the
dollar, with markets on edge about possible intervention after the Bank
of Japan kept interest rates on hold.
In a volatile trading day, the yen was last down 0.66% at 156.67, after
briefly jumping to 154.97, having hit minutes earlier its lowest level
of 156.82 per dollar since 1990.
The yen also briefly rallied against other major currencies but last
traded near its weakest level in almost 16 years against the euro, at
168.23, and its softest in 11 years against the Australian dollar.
The sudden jump left traders on high alert for signs of intervention. It
was not immediately clear what caused the move.
After a two-day meeting, the Bank of Japan left its short-term interest
rate target at 0-0.1% on Friday and made small upward adjustments in its
inflation forecast. Investors had not expected a policy shift but took
the decision as confirmation that only small moves lie ahead.
BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda told a press conference after the rate decision
that monetary policy did not directly target currency rates, but
exchange-rate volatility could have a significant impact on the economy
and prices.
"If yen moves have an effect on the economy and prices that is hard to
ignore, it could be a reason to adjust policy," he said.
Jane Foley, head of FX strategy at Rabobank, said traders had been
wondering "whether the Ministry of Finance and BoJ would at least check
prices today, but we've had no confirmation that has happened."
"Certainly the market has been on tenterhooks, and is very sensitive to
any sign that the BoJ could be doing that today."
One London-based currency analyst said he suspected the move higher in
the yen was down to a position squeeze that sparked others to sell
dollars against the Japanese currency in a nervous market.
INTERVENTION WATCH
Traders have been on watch for weeks for possible intervention by
Japanese authorities, as even a historic exit from negative rates has
failed to lift the currency.
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Banknotes of Japanese yen and U.S. dollar are seen in this
illustration picture taken September 23, 2022. REUTERS/Florence
Lo/File Photo
The yen's 11% drop against the dollar this year is the largest fall
of any G10 currency, driven mostly by the wide gap between U.S. and
Japanese government bond yields, which is more than 378 basis points
for the 10-year debt.
That encourages borrowing and short-selling yen in order to earn
better interest, or carry, in dollars and other currencies.
The gap could widen even further, and exacerbate pressure on the
yen, if data due at 1230 GMT shows a rise in the Federal Reserve's
preferred inflation measure - the U.S. core PCE price index.
Japanese Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki said on Friday he was
closely watching currency moves and was prepared to take full action
in response.
Japan intervened in the currency market three times in 2022, selling
the dollar to buy yen, first in September and again in October as
the yen slid at the time towards a 32-year low of 152 to the dollar.
Traders now figure there is not much Tokyo can do to reverse the
currency's slide while interest rates and momentum are heavily
skewed against it.
Elsewhere, yen selling lifted the Australian and New Zealand
dollars, and the Aussie is set for its largest weekly gain this year
after a surprisingly hot inflation report.
Sterling and the euro were steady, holding gains made on Thursday
when data showed the U.S. had grown at its slowest pace in nearly
two years.
The U.S. dollar traded 0.02% higher against a basket of currencies
at 105.63, after sliding to two-week lows earlier.
(Reporting by Joice Alves, Alun John and Tom Westbrook; Editing by
Gareth Jones, William Maclean and Tomasz Janowski)
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