Japan intervenes to support yen for first time since 1998

Bloomberg

Japan intervened to prop up the yen for the first time since 1998, after its central bank sparked further declines in the currency by sticking with ultra-low interest rates as its global peers hiked.
The yen rose as much as 2.5% against the dollar, pulling back sharply from the lows of the day when it had breached a key psychological level of 145, as top
currency official Masato Kanda said the government was taking “decisive action.”
The intervention shows that Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s government has reached the limit of its patience after the yen tumbled around 20% against
the dollar this year as hedge funds kept adding to short bets on the yen. The question now is whether the unilateral action will work, with the currency already paring gains within hours.
“I think they went in solo, but they can’t do so without at least informing the US,” said Nobuyasu Atago, chief economist at Ichiyoshi Securities and a former BOJ official. “If they really want to change the yen’s slide as a trend, I think the government needs to get its act together with the BOJ.”
The currency extended gains in early New York trading hours, touching an intraday high of 140.50 per dollar.
“The government is concerned about excessive moves in the foreign exchange markets, and we took decisive action just now,” Kanda said. The intervention, ordered up by the Ministry of Finance, comes with risks if it fails to scare off speculators. Hedge funds have been adding to bearish bets on the currency, with Goldman Sachs Group warning it may decline all the way to 155.
“At best, their action can help to slow the pace of yen depreciation,” said Christopher Wong,
a currency strategist at Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. “The move alone is not likely to alter the underlying trend unless the dollar, US Treasury yields turn lower or the BOJ tweaks its monetary policy.”
BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda insisted at a briefing in Tokyo there were no rate hikes in the works and guidance on future policy would not change for the time being, even for as long as two or three years in principle. Still, his influence over policy will fade next April when he steps down.
“Today’s outcome strengthens my view that the chance of policy change is almost zero under Kuroda’s governorship,” said Masamichi Adachi, chief Japan economist at UBS Securities.
Kuroda’s stance sets him apart from other central banks that had also had negative rates, with the European Central Bank and the Swiss National Bank all hiking to deal with surging inflation.

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