JAPANESE YEN WEEKLY FORECAST: NEUTRAL

  • Yen swings by nearly 4% after touching a 32-year low against the US Dollar
  • Japanese officials almost certainly intervened in FX markets to check sellers
  • Bank of Japan meeting in focus ahead, with dovish guidance likely to endure

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The Japanese Yen exploded higher in the closing hours of last week’s trade. The benchmark USD/JPY exchange rate came within a hair of the 152 figure for the first time since May 1990, then plunged. It is on course to finish the day down nearly 2 percent, marking the biggest one-day rise since early March 2020. Those gains were scored amid the risk aversion triggered in the early days of the Covid-19 outbreak.

Japan Almost Certainly Intervened in FX Markets Again

The high to low intraday swing registered this time came to a telltale 3.78 percent, matching with almost perfect precision the move marked by Japan officials’ intervention in FX markets on September 22. In that episode, the Ministry of Finance (MOF) directed the Bank of Japan (BOJ) to buy Yen as USD/JPY probed above 145 for the first time in decades. Prices swung 3.8 percent top-to-bottom.

Japanese officialdom offered familiar threats on Thursday. Vice Finance Minister for International Affairs Masato Kanda – the MOF’s point-person on currency affairs – told reporters that authorities are “always ready to take necessary action as excessive volatility has become increasingly unacceptable.” After Friday’s price jump, he declined to comment on interventions even if they happen. A later article from Nikkei citing unnamed sources appeared to confirm policymakers’ involvement.

USD/JPY Spot (daily)

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Chart created with TradingView

Yen Sellers May Hesitate as the BOJ Maintains Dovish Policy Stance

This makes for a murky outlook in the week ahead. A regularly scheduled monetary policy announcement from the Bank of Japan is firmly in the spotlight. Governor Haruhiko Kuroda has assertively maintained an ultra-dovish stance even as most other global central banks rush to tighten amid blistering inflation, building up punishing yield differentials and sinking the Yen against increasingly higher-returning counterparts.

The MOF seems content to let the currency depreciate, but not too quickly. It’s probably quite telling that that officials’ second intervention in a month occurred after the Yen fully erased the impact of the first outing and proceeded to shed nearly 5 percent more of its value. Clearly, there is scant appetite to defend a particular level on the exchange rate or to invest in lasting JPY appreciation.

For its part, the BOJ seems thus set up for another repeat of the dovish mantra. Traders may be loathe to pounce on such guidance however, at least in the near term, lest they be caught on the wrong end of another MOF-directed spike. Scaring away speculators is precisely what Mr. Kanda and company have in mind, of course. They may be aided in the effort as Fed officials go mum ahead of the November 2 FOMC outing.

On balance, this might make for staid activity in the near term. The corporate earnings season may offer a bit of downward JPY pressure if corporates’ downbeat guidance continues to allow for nominal upside surprises on third-quarter results, throwing a bone to battered risk appetite. Shell-shocked markets may struggle to build on this, however. USD/JPY slowed to near-standstill for two weeks after September’s intervention.

FX TRADING RESOURCES

— Written by Ilya Spivak, Head Strategist, APAC for DailyFX

Follow or contact @IlyaSpivak on Twitter

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