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Japanese politicians threaten to take action against weak yen, but remain silent on interventions By Reuters

Japanese politicians threaten to take action against weak yen, but remain silent on interventions By Reuters

By Makiko Yamazaki and Leika Kihara

TOKYO (Reuters) – Japan’s top currency diplomat said on Friday the authorities would take action in the foreign exchange market if necessary, repeating his insistence after the yen’s overnight rise sparked speculation in markets about foreign exchange intervention.

Masato Kanda, deputy finance minister for international affairs, declined to comment on whether authorities had intervened in the foreign exchange market to support the yen, but told reporters that the yen’s recent moves were not in line with fundamentals.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshimasa Hayashi also told reporters on Friday that authorities were ready to take all possible measures regarding exchange rates, signaling his willingness to intervene in the market to stop excessive yen depreciation.

The yen comments break a recent silence from Japanese policymakers, who have been reticent to comment on their willingness to intervene as analysts question the effectiveness of persuasion in preventing sharp yen losses.

“I find the recent large currency fluctuations strange in terms of whether they are consistent with fundamentals. It would be highly worrying if excessive volatility driven by speculation drives up import prices and negatively impacts people’s lives,” Kanda said.

“Currency interventions should certainly be rare in a market with flexible interest rates, but we need to respond appropriately to excessive volatility or disorderly movements,” he added.

Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki also said at a regular press conference on Friday that rapid, unilateral movements in the foreign exchange market were undesirable.

The yen rose nearly 3% on Thursday, its biggest daily gain since late 2022, shortly after U.S. consumer price data revived market expectations that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates in September.

GUESSING GAME

Some local media attributed the yen’s sudden rise to a round of official purchases to prop up the currency, which is languishing at a 38-year low. The dollar was at 158.79 yen in Asia on Friday, after falling to 157.40 yen overnight.

“Japan probably intervened, otherwise the yen would not have moved so sharply so suddenly,” said Takahide Kiuchi, an economist at the Nomura Research Institute, of the yen’s overnight rise.

“Japan’s previous interventions came when the yen was falling, and some of them were not necessarily effective. This time they worked because the authorities intervened precisely when the weak yen’s trend was reversing,” he said.

Meanwhile, the newspaper reported, citing several sources, that the Bank of Japan had conducted interest rate comparisons on the euro against the yen with banks on Friday.

Finance Minister Suzuki declined to comment on whether authorities have carried out interest rate controls, which traders see as a precursor to actual interventions to buy the yen.

It has recently become standard practice for the Japanese authorities not to confirm whether or not they have intervened in the foreign exchange market.

Kanda told reporters that the yen’s 21 yen decline against the dollar since the beginning of the year and its 5% decline last month were “huge.”

According to official data, Tokyo intervened in the foreign exchange market worth 9.8 trillion yen ($61 billion) in late April and early May after the Japanese currency hit a 34-year low of 160.245 to the dollar on April 29.

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Japan's Deputy Finance Minister for International Affairs Masato Kanda speaks during a news conference after attending the meeting of G20 finance ministers and central bank governors in Sao Paulo, Brazil, February 29, 2024. REUTERS/Carla Carniel/File Photo

However, currency analysts are divided on whether Tokyo intervened on Thursday or not.

Daisaku Ueno, chief foreign exchange strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ (NYSE:) Morgan Stanley Securities, said the yen’s rise was caused by halts triggered by weaker-than-expected U.S. consumer price data as short positions in the yen had become very overstretched, but he did not rule out the possibility of intervention.