TOKYO -As the yen slid past 145 per dollar with barely a murmur from Japanese policymakers during recent days, suspicion grew that they won’t be as quick to order intervention as they were last year as they now reap some benefits from a weaker currency.
Surging exports helped economic growth hit 6 percent on an annualized basis in the second quarter, and lower global oil prices have helped keep a lid on the import bill.
But a key factor behind the yen’s weakness is unchanged, namely the yawning yield gap with the United States. The Bank of Japan is taking baby steps away from its ultra-loose monetary policy, and there are increasing hopes that U.S. rates may have peaked, but as of now, the bond market provides a good reason to sell yen.
Yet currency traders remain nervous about provoking intervention, as the yen entered the same zone that triggered heavy dollar selling by Japanese authorities in September and October of last year.
Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki issued a reminder on Tuesday against causing volatility in the exchange rate, as the
yen struck a 9/1-2 month low of 145.60 in Asian trading.
Suzuki warned that rapid moves are “undesirable” and the government is “ready to respond appropriately,” while reiterating that no specific levels are targeted for intervention.
Officials had been a lot more vociferous in June when the yen weakened past 144, and their subdued response to the latest depreciation was interpreted by market participants as a sign that Tokyo will tolerate a bit more weakness so long as speculators didn’t push it too fast.
“The pain associated with the 145-150 level is less now for the economy, so I don’t think they’ll be quite as aggressive as they were last year,” said Aaron Hurd, a senior portfolio manager at State Street Global Advisors in Boston.
If the uptrend for the dollar-yen rate is gradual, intervention isn’t likely until “around 150 or a little bit above,” he said.
For now, traders are testing the waters by selling the yen against sterling and the Swiss franc, mindful that selling against the dollar could gather momentum quickly.
No imperative till 150
Japan spent more than 9 trillion yen ($62 billion) intervening in currency markets last year to arrest the yen’s decline, buying yen in September and October – first at levels around 145 and again at a 32-year low just short of 152.
At the end of August last year, the price of Brent crude oil was about $105 per barrel, and complaints about the pain from imported energy prices were in the Japanese press on a daily basis.
“Not only economically, but also politically, yen weakness at that time was a problem, and it clearly impacted the government’s approval rating,” said Masayuki Kichikawa, chief macro strategist at Sumitomo Mitsui DS Asset Management in Tokyo.
The price of Brent is now around $88, and those complaints over imported fuel have faded into memory.
From a purely macroeconomic perspective, Kichikawa said, officials have no imperative to prevent yen weakness before 150, which is consistent with the mild inflationary pressure that the BOJ aims to foster.
The bond market, which precipitated the yen’s slide, may ultimately give Japan’s authorities reason to hold off on pressing the intervention button.
Should the lynchpin 10-year U.S. Treasury yield stabilize not far above 4 percent, and Japanese yields rise towards the BOJ’s new 1 percent cap, Japanese authorities may be inclined to let market forces perform a gradual recovery in the yen as the yield gap closes.
“The policy divergence story is going to turn, if it hasn’t already,” said Shinichiro Kadota, a currency strategist at Barclays in Tokyo. “The risk of intervention definitely increases above 145, but the urgency is less.”
($1 = 145.4900 yen)