Thursday Oct 5 2023 08:55
9 min
The Japanese yen (USD/JPY) steadied around 149 per dollar as of Wednesday, following a knee-jerk drop from 150.15 to 147.3 in the previous session that raised concerns of potential government intervention to support the national currency.
The currency strengthened by 1.7% against the dollar to trade at 147.3 late on Tuesday, but subsequently retraced most of those gains as better-than-anticipated U.S. jobs data reinforced the expectation that the Federal Reserve would maintain interest rates "higher for longer.”
Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki recently issued a cautious warning about monitoring currency movements, saying he was watching forex markets “with a strong sense of urgency”. Japanese authorities intervened in the currency markets for the first time since 1998 last year when the yen fell to 145.9.
Throughout this year, the yen has seen a significant decline, driven by the Bank of Japan's (BoJ) unwavering commitment to an ultra-easy monetary policy, even as other major central banks embarked on an aggressive tightening trajectory. The U.S. Federal Reserve’s hiking cycle has brought the dollar close to a one-year high, with the DXY — an index measuring the greenback’s weight against six other major currencies, including the yen — projected to potentially breach the 108 mark in the near future by multiple analysts.
In an overview on Wednesday, Markets.com Chief Market Analyst Neil Wilson was fairly certain of the BoJ’s intervention in the dollar to yen rate:
Chris Turner, Global Head of Markets at Dutch bank ING, said the drop “had all the hallmarks of intervention” but stopped short of a definitive verdict. According to Turner, the rise in the yen may have been triggered by market players selling off their positions:
In their dollar to yen forecast, Economists at Frankfurt-based Commerzbank said that interventions do little to change the fundamental situation surrounding the Japanese currency:
The USDJPY forecast from Societe Generale also saw the yen remaining vulnerable against the dollar going forward, saying the yen wouldn’t be able to “retreat in a durable fashion”:
In a longer-term USDJPY prediction, economists at Nordea echoed the sentiments from Societe Generale and Commerzbank, forecasting the yen to weaken in the short term. According to Nordea, the dollar to yen rate will maintain at 150 within the next three months, and scale back to 140 by the end of 2024.
The bank’s yen forecast for 2025 saw the currency trading at 130 against the dollar:
At the time of writing, the U.S. dollar index, or DXY, was trading at 106.87 (down 0.12% on the day), while the dollar to yen rate traded at 148.87, as per MarketWatch data.
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