In this currency pair, up is down. It takes more Yen to buy a dollar.
Decisive Steps
Kypdo News reports Japan Dangles Threat of “Decisive” Steps as Yen Slips Past 150.
Japan is ready to take “decisive” steps against volatile yen movements, Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki said Thursday shortly after the currency slid past the 150 mark to the U.S. dollar for the first time since 1990, in his strongest warning yet of intervention.
The government is monitoring developments in the foreign exchange market “meticulously” with a high sense of vigilance, Suzuki told reporters, saying that excessive and rapid yen movements driven by speculators cannot be tolerated.
“We are focused on volatility, and there is no change at all in our stance that we will take decisive steps when we see such movements,” Suzuki said at the Finance Ministry. “I don’t comment on specific currency levels.”
Japanese authorities have repeatedly said rapid, one-sided currency movements are undesirable, and Suzuki has warned of taking “appropriate” steps as the yen has hit 32-year lows.
Line in the Sand
Mercy me!
The threats of intervention have gone from “appropriate” to “meticulous” with a high sense of vigilance, to threats of “decisive” steps.
Hello Bank of Japan, the ball is in your court.
How much of your dollar reserves will you blow defending your line in the sand?
Interventions are Counterproductive
The fact of the matter is interventions are counterproductive. Blowing foreign exchange reserves weakens a currency.
The BoJ needs to hike rates to stop the Yen from falling. But the BoJ does not want to hike rates. So it yaps. The market is essentially calling the BoJ’s bluff.
Shades of Soros
On September 16, 1992 George Soros Broke the Bank of England.
Soros is known as “The Man Who Broke the Bank of England” because of his short sale of US$10 billion worth of pounds sterling, which made him a profit of $1 billion during the 1992 Black Wednesday UK currency crisis. Based on his early studies of philosophy, Soros formulated the General Theory of Reflexivity for capital markets, which he says renders a clear picture of asset bubbles and fundamental/market value of securities, as well as value discrepancies used for shorting and swapping stocks.
Soros had been building a huge short position in pounds sterling for months leading up to the Black Wednesday of September 1992. Soros had recognized the unfavorable position of the United Kingdom in the European Exchange Rate Mechanism [ERM]. For Soros, the rate at which the United Kingdom was brought into the European Exchange Rate Mechanism was too high, their inflation was also much too high (triple the German rate), and British interest rates were hurting their asset prices.
By September 16, 1992, the day of Black Wednesday, Soros’s fund had sold short more than $10 billion in pounds, profiting from the UK government’s reluctance to either raise its interest rates to levels comparable to those of other European Exchange Rate Mechanism countries or float its currency.
Finally, the UK withdrew from the European Exchange Rate Mechanism, devaluing the pound. Soros’s profit on the bet was estimated at over $1 billion. He was dubbed “the man who broke the Bank of England”.
In 1999, economist Paul Krugman was critical of Soros’s effect on financial markets. “Nobody who has read a business magazine in the last few years can be unaware that these days there really are investors who not only move money in anticipation of a currency crisis, but actually do their best to trigger that crisis for fun and profit. These new actors on the scene do not yet have a standard name; my proposed term is ‘Soroi’.”
The ERM was created 1979 to reduce exchange rate variability and stabilize monetary policy across Europe before introducing the Euro.
In joining the ERM, the Bank of England was obligated to keep the British Pound in a range of 2.78 to 3.13.
Soros bet the Bank of England (BOE) would not be able to do that.
The BOE kept pledging more and more money defending the peg. It even hiked rates to 15% to defend the range peg.
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When informed of this Soros replied, “What are they going to do tomorrow?”
The BOE capitulated in an emergency meeting. Soros made a billion dollars, an amazing amount of money in 1992.
Japan’s Currency Intervention
On June 10, Reuters explained What Currency Intervention to Combat a Weak Yen Look Like.
“We have seen sharp yen declines and are concerned about recent currency market moves,” the Ministry of Finance, BOJ and the Financial Services Agency said in the joint statement released after their executives’ meeting.
The latest jaw-boning came a day after the yen hit a fresh 20-year low against the dollar and a seven-year trough against the euro on expectations the Bank of Japan (BOJ) will continue to lag behind other major central banks in exiting stimulus policy.
Aside from verbal intervention, Japan has several options to stem excessive yen falls. Among them is to directly intervene in the currency market and buy up large amounts of yen.
Yen-buying intervention has been very rare. The last time Japan intervened to support its currency was in 1998, when the Asian financial crisis triggered a yen sell-off and a rapid capital outflow from the region. Before that, Tokyo intervened to counter yen falls in 1991-1992.
When Japan intervenes to stem yen rises, the Ministry of Finance issues short-term bills to raise yen which it can then sell in the market to weaken the Japanese currency’s value.
Yen-buying intervention is more difficult than yen-selling.
If it were to conduct intervention to stop yen falls, authorities must tap Japan’s foreign reserves for dollars to sell in the market in exchange for yen.
Japan’s foreign reserves stand at $1.33 trillion, the world’s second largest after China’s and likely comprised mostly of dollars. While abundant, reserves could quickly dwindle if huge sums are required to influence rates each time Tokyo steps in.
Japan’s Balance of Trade
Japan needs massive food and energy imports with the Yen sinking and food and energy costs soaring.
On March 8, Reuters reported Japan logs biggest current account deficit since 2014 as oil import costs surge.
Japan, the world’s third-largest economy, posted a current account deficit of 1.1887 trillion yen ($10.31 billion) in January, the data showed, versus economists’ median estimate of a 880 billion yen deficit in a Reuters poll.
It was the second straight month of deficit and marked the second largest deficit under comparable data going back to 1985.
Surging fuel costs drove up the value of imports by 39.9% in January from a year earlier, outpacing a 15.2% rise in exports.
End of the 40-Year Bull in Debt and a “Global Depression” Threat
In case you missed it, the ECB has a similar dilemma.
For discussion, please see The ECB Has a Huge Dilemma: Price stability or Bail Out Nations
Finally, please take another look at End of the 40-Year Bull in Debt and a “Global Depression” Threat
Over the years I maintained a currency crisis was far more likely in Japan than the US. We will see. Regardless, the end of the 40-year bull market in debt does not rate to be a pretty affair.
Bank of Japan Blows Record $81 Billion Defending It’s No Rate Hike Pledge
On June 21, 2022 I noted Bank of Japan Blows Record $81 Billion Defending It’s No Rate Hike Pledge
If the BOJ intervenes again today in a decisive move, “What are they going to do tomorrow?“
This post originated at MishTalk.Com.
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