Wednesday 24 August 2011

Can the Bank of Japan's curb the yen's strength?

The Japanese economy is in recession, it is still recovering from a devastating natural disaster, Japan’s interest rate is at rock bottom and what is more, Moody’s has just downgrades Japanese debt. So why has the Japanese yen strengthened to record levels in recent weeks and months?


The answer is simple: the yen’s safe-haven status. The past six months have thrown up a huge amount of uncertainty in the financial markets. The Japanese earthquake disrupted international trade patterns, oil prices are sky high, global growth has slowed down, the eurozone debt crisis threatens the global banking system, and the US has had its debt downgraded and could be heading into another recession.

What do investors do in this climate? Head out of riskier assets such as commodity-linked currencies and equities, and into traditional safe haven assets such as government bonds (such as UK or US, not Greek!), gold, and the yen and swiss franc. The fact that the Japanese economy is struggling matters not a jot, the yen’s safe-haven status trumps all.

Turmoil in the financial markets looks unlikely to let up any time soon; it will probably take months for a long-term solution to the eurozone debt crisis to emerge, not to mention the increasing likelihood of a US recession and further debt downgrade next year. So what can stop the yen from strengthening?

Certainly the Japanese government and the Bank of Japan are very uncomfortable with the yen at current levels. There has been much jawboning about intervention in the currency markets in order to weaken the yen. The Bank of Japan conducted some unilateral intervention on Aug 4th, injecting around $3bn into the Japanese economy. Going on the yen’s climb in the time that has passed, this was unsuccessful.

Japan has very recently announced a $100bn credit line to encourage domestic firms to sell yen and invest overseas. Japanese officials may be coming to terms with the fact that they cannot to disrupt the yen’s longer-term strengthening. Further intervention efforts can be expected however, if for no other reason than to slow the yen’s appreciation. 75 yen to the dollar may well be the next benchmark which triggers further action from the Bank of Japan.

Richard Driver
Senior Analyst – Caxton FX


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