Japan issues fresh warnings against sharp yen falls

By Kentaro Sugiyama and Leika Kihara

TOKYO (Reuters) -Japanese authorities will take necessary actions on currencies, Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki said on Thursday, signalling readiness to intervene in the exchange-rate market after the yen’s slide to a fresh 38-year low against the dollar.

“It’s desirable for exchange rates to move stably. Rapid, one-sided moves are undesirable. In particular, we’re deeply concerned about the effect on the economy,” Suzuki told reporters.

“We are watching moves with a high sense of urgency, analysing the factors behind the moves, and will take necessary actions,” he said.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshimasa Hayashi also told a news conference on Thursday that Tokyo will take “appropriate” action against excessive currency moves. He declined to comment on yen levels and whether authorities would intervene.

The yen stood at 160.45 per dollar in Asia on Thursday, remaining a fraction away from the 38-year low of 160.88 hit overnight on Wednesday.

Japanese authorities are facing renewed pressure to combat sharp declines in the yen, which has fallen 12% so far this year against the dollar as traders focus on the wide interest rate divergence between Japan and the United States.

The yen’s fast-pitch decline below the key 160-to-the-dollar level is heightening market alarm over the chance of imminent yen-buying intervention.

“At this point, authorities are probably starting to worry not just about the speed but the level,” Masafumi Yamamoto, chief currency strategist at Mizuho Securities, said in a research note. “Unless they intervene, there’s a risk the yen will slide toward 162.”

But analysts doubt whether jawboning, and even intervention, can reverse the weak-yen tide that is driven mostly by uncertainty over how soon the U.S. Federal Reserve will start cutting interest rates.

The Bank of Japan has dropped signals of an imminent interest rate hike, though any increase in the current near-zero short-term policy target will still keep Japan’s borrowing costs very low. Its next policy meeting will be held on July 30-31.

Tokyo spent 9.8 trillion yen ($61 billion) intervening in the foreign exchange market at the end of April and early May, after the Japanese currency hit a 34-year low of 160.245 per dollar on April 29.

($1 = 160.4800 yen)

This post is originally published on INVESTING.

  • Related Posts

    Oil falls after Trump reverses Colombia sanctions threat

    By Anna Hirtenstein LONDON (Reuters) -Oil prices wavered on Monday after the U.S. and Colombia reached a deal on deportations, reducing immediate concern over oil supply disruptions but keeping traders…

    Dollar gains on tariffs fears; euro looks to ECB meeting

    Investing.com – The US dollar slipped lower Monday, rebounding after recent losses as attention returned to the potential for trade tariffs from the Trump administration at the start of a…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    You Missed

    Google Lifts IG France’s Ads Restriction after 7 Years, Account Openings Double

    • April 29, 2025
    Google Lifts IG France’s Ads Restriction after 7 Years, Account Openings Double

    Yen Gains Ground as Tariff Tensions Persist. Forecast as of 29.04.2025

    • April 29, 2025
    Yen Gains Ground as Tariff Tensions Persist. Forecast as of 29.04.2025

    Phillip Nova Plugs Into $2 Trillion Asia Forex Market With Integral

    • April 29, 2025
    Phillip Nova Plugs Into $2 Trillion Asia Forex Market With Integral

    Ultimate Guide to Doji Star Reversal Patterns

    • April 29, 2025
    Ultimate Guide to Doji Star Reversal Patterns

    Plus500 Shares Hits All-Time High, Analysts See More Room to Run And 3,400p Target

    • April 29, 2025
    Plus500 Shares Hits All-Time High, Analysts See More Room to Run And 3,400p Target

    Short-Term Analysis for Oil, Gold, and EURUSD for 29.04.2025

    • April 29, 2025
    Short-Term Analysis for Oil, Gold, and EURUSD for 29.04.2025