Japan issues fresh warnings against sharp yen falls
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[June 27, 2024] By
Kentaro Sugiyama and Leika Kihara
TOKYO (Reuters) -Japanese authorities will take necessary actions on
currencies, Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki said on Thursday, signaling
readiness to intervene in the exchange-rate market after the yen's slide
to a fresh 38-year low against the dollar.
"It's desirable for exchange rates to move stably. Rapid, one-sided
moves are undesirable. In particular, we're deeply concerned about the
effect on the economy," Suzuki told reporters.
"We are watching moves with a high sense of urgency, analyzing the
factors behind the moves, and will take necessary actions," he said.
Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshimasa Hayashi also told a news conference on
Thursday that Tokyo will take "appropriate" action against excessive
currency moves. He declined to comment on yen levels and whether
authorities would intervene.
The yen stood at 160.52 per dollar on Thursday, remaining a fraction
away from the 38-year low of 160.88 hit on Wednesday.
Japanese authorities are facing renewed pressure to combat sharp
declines in the yen, which has fallen 12% so far this year against the
dollar as traders focus on the wide interest rate divergence between
Japan and the United States.
The yen's fast-pitch decline below the key 160-to-the-dollar level is
heightening market alarm over the chance of imminent yen-buying
intervention.
"At this point, authorities are probably starting to worry not just
about the speed but the level," Masafumi Yamamoto, chief currency
strategist at Mizuho Securities, said in a research note. "Unless they
intervene, there's a risk the yen will slide toward 162."
But analysts doubt whether jawboning, and even intervention, can reverse
the weak-yen tide that is driven mostly by uncertainty over how soon the
U.S. Federal Reserve will start cutting interest rates.
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Japanese Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki speaks during an event
about expanding health coverage for all during the IMF and World
Bank’s 2024 annual Spring Meetings in Washington, U.S., April 18,
2024. REUTERS/Ken Cedeno/ File Photo
The Bank of Japan has dropped signals of an imminent interest rate
hike, though any increase in the current near-zero short-term policy
target will still keep Japan's borrowing costs very low.
Still, the yen's slide could heighten pressure on the BOJ to
accompany a scheduled announcement of a quantitative tightening (QT)
plan with a rate hike at its next policy meeting on July 30-31, some
analysts say.
Speaking after a meeting to approve the government's monthly
economic report, Economy Minister Yoshitaka Shindo said on Thursday
that policymakers must be vigilant to the risk of a soft yen pushing
up inflation through rising import costs.
"A weak yen is among factors that push up inflation, so we will
closely watch the currency's moves in guiding monetary policy," BOJ
Deputy Governor Shinichi Uchida was quoted as saying at the meeting,
according to a Cabinet Office official who briefed reporters on the
discussions.
Tokyo spent 9.8 trillion yen ($61 billion) intervening in the
foreign exchange market at the end of April and early May, after the
Japanese currency hit a 34-year low of 160.245 per dollar on April
29.
($1 = 160.4800 yen)
(Reporting by Kentaro Sugiyama and Leika Kihara; Additional
reporting by Kiyoshi Takenaka, Yoshifumi Takemoto and Kantaro
Komiya; Editing by Christian Schmollinger and Jacquelne Wong)
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