Japan Intervenes After Yen Slides Against the Dollar
The yen has plummeted this year as traders shift bets on U.S. interest rates
By
Kosaku Narioka
Weilun Soon
Updated April 29, 2024 8:03 am ET
SINGAPORE—Japan intervened to prop up the yen after it hit a multidecade low against the dollar on Monday, people familiar with the matter said.
The currency has plummeted against the dollar this year, hurt by increasing doubts among traders about the timing of U.S. interest rate cuts.
The yen weakened to around 160 per dollar on Monday, but bounced back to around 155 per dollar after Japanese authorities started buying yen and selling dollars, according to the people.
Japanese officials didn’t officially confirm the move but Masato Kanda, the finance ministry’s top currency official, hinted at the intervention.
“It is difficult to ignore the bad effects that these violent and abnormal movements [in currencies] will cause for the nation’s economy,” said Kanda, adding that the government will “continue” to respond to wild currency moves.
The intervention came after weeks of speculation by traders that Tokyo was gearing up to help its beleaguered currency. Traders have turned increasingly bearish on the yen, which has stumbled despite a bull run in Japanese stocks and a wider improvement in the country’s economy.
It is unlikely to be the last time Japan intervenes in the currency market this year, given that U.S. interest rates are likely to remain high, said Alvin Tan, head of Asia foreign-exchange strategy at RBC Capital Markets.
“We will have a tug of war going forward between Tokyo and the market,” he said.
The decline of the yen shows the huge impact U.S. interest rates can have on foreign currencies. Although very few traders think the Federal Reserve is going to raise interest rates this year, they do think a series of highly anticipated rate cuts will be delayed—and that has sent the yen tumbling.
Japan’s ultralow interest rates make its currency particularly vulnerable to changing U.S. rate expectations. The yen’s value has for decades suffered from so-called carry trades, where traders borrow in a currency with low rates and invest the money in a different country where returns are higher.
Japan is finally bringing an end to its long commitment to ultraloose monetary policy—but only at a gradual pace.
The Bank of Japan became the last central bank to abandon negative interest rates in March. Some traders bet the yen would strengthen as a result. Instead, the currency has lost more than 9% of its value against the U.S. dollar this year, and wagers have started to pile up in the opposite direction.
The yen fell sharply Friday after the Bank of Japan left its interest-rate target unchanged. BOJ Gov. Kazuo Ueda disappointed traders who were looking for hints about further rate increases.
Japan’s last official attempt to prop up the yen against the dollar was in October 2022, when the Ministry of Finance said it had bought yen that month worth around $41.1 billion in today’s exchange rate.
It was a public holiday in Japan on Monday, reducing trading volumes.