Like rain off a roof
The yen keeps dripping lower
Can it fall further?
On a quiet morning after a welcome rebound in equity markets around the world, there has been an uptick in discussion regarding the yen, BOJ Governor Ueda and the upcoming BOJ meeting this Friday. One of the things that seems to have Ueda-san and the rest of the BOJ confused is that after their last meeting on March 18, where they raised interest rates for the first time in forever, the yen has continued to weaken. A quick look at the chart below shows the relatively steady decline in the currency since that date.

Source: tradingeconomics.com
Perhaps this is a sign that Japan’s monetary policy, at least given the enormous interest rate differentials with the US, just doesn’t really matter to the traders in the FX market. A look at relative interest rate movements in the respective 10-year bonds shows that Treasury yields have rallied about 30bps while JGB yields have risen just half that amount since that BOJ meeting. One thing that is becoming clearer is that the pressure on Ueda-san and FinMin Suzuki to do something about the weakening yen is growing. It seems they have finally figured out that a weak yen has a direct link to rising yen prices of energy for both home and autos, and that the people in Japan are running out of patience with those rises.
Perhaps this explains the increase in the comments by these two critical players, with both threatening action if things get out of hand. For instance, Suzuki explained, “I think it’s fair to assume that the environment for taking appropriate action on forex is in place, though I won’t say what the action is,” when speaking to Parliament last night. His problem is he knows that intervention by Japan only will have no long-term impact and merely allow traders a better entry point to continue to pressure the yen lower.
Meanwhile, Ueda-san was absolutely loquacious in his comments to Parliament, explaining, “we will set our short-term interest rate target at a level deemed appropriate to sustainably and stably achieve our 2% inflation target. If underlying inflation rises toward 2% in line with our projections, we will adjust a degree of monetary easing. In that case, we will likely raise short-term interest rates.”
Now, does this mean that they are going to do something at their meeting this week? I think the probability of a policy change is vanishingly small. Quite frankly, they are very aware that their current toolkit is not fit for the purpose of strengthening the yen and so jawboning is pretty much all they have. In fact, to the extent that they would like to see the yen strengthen, their best bet is to call Chairman Powell and plead their case that the US should cut rates, and by a lot, or the world will end. I don’t see that happening either.
Something worth noting is that Powell is facing pressure from multiple directions as foreign central bankers are desperate for the Fed to cut so they can too, and from the administration which believes that lower rates will help them in their quest to be reelected. But, in the end, there is no evidence that the Fed is going to reverse their recent comments and turn dovish. As long as that is the case, the trend higher in USDJPY remains quite clear and I see no reason to expect anything other than minor pullbacks in the near future. However, if the Fed does cut rates despite the ongoing inflation pressures in the US, look for the dollar to fall sharply while risk assets explode higher.
So, while we all await both the BOJ and the PCE data on Friday, let’s recap the overnight session. While green was the predominant color on screens overnight with Japan (+0.3%) and Hong Kong (+1.9%) leading the way, mainland Chinese stocks continue to suffer (-0.7%) dragging down Korean shares (-0.25%). But otherwise, India, Taiwan, Australia, Singapore, etc., were all in the green. In Europe, there is no question that things are looking up as every market is higher, most by 1% or more after the Flash PMI data was released showing that economic activity was picking up across the continent. While manufacturing remains in contraction, and is hardly improving, the services sector is definitely stronger. Meanwhile, at this hour (7:30) US futures are firmer by about 0.25%.
In the bond markets, price activity has been far more muted with Treasury yields recouping the 2bps they lost yesterday, while European sovereigns are higher by 1bp across the board. The ECB commentary continue to highlight a June hike with the most dovish acolytes calling for 100bps of cuts this year (Portugal’s Centeno) while Spain’s de Guindos reminded everyone that the Fed was still driving the bus and they need to think about the whole world, not just the US. As you can see, Powell faces pressure from all over.
On the commodity front, the retracement from the massive bull rally in metals prices is continuing apace with gold (-1.4%), silver (-1.4%) and copper (-1.1%) all under more pressure today after having fallen sharply for the past two sessions already. My take is that this is an overdue correction from a remarkable move higher, but that the underlying story remains intact. Certainly, the apparent lessening of tensions in the Israel-Iran issue has helped this movement as well as its impact on the price of oil (-0.75% today, -4.65% in past week). However, the inflation story remains front and center when it comes to pricing commodities and there is no evidence whatsoever that prices are slipping back. As we head toward summer, I do anticipate that metals demand will return, especially if the economy continues to perform at its current levels.
Finally, the dollar is slightly softer this morning but remains above 106 on the DXY. We have already discussed the yen, which cannot find a bid anywhere, but the pound (+0.25%) is rebounding after PMI data in the UK was also a bit better. However, overall, there are gainers and losers in both the G10 and EMG blocs, the largest of which is the ZAR (-0.3%) which is clearly suffering alongside the slide in metals prices. Not surprisingly, NOK (-0.2%) is feeling pressure from oil’s decline. But the euro has edged higher, and it has taken its CE4 counterparts higher while LATAM currencies seem to be taking the day off entirely. We need real news to change the story here.
On the data front, we see the Flash PMI data (exp Manufacturing 52.0, Services 52.0) and New Home Sales (662K) and that’s really it. With no Fed speakers, once again the market will take its cues from earnings releases with today’s biggest likely to be Google Alphabet and Tesla. The dollar has been on a roll lately, so it would be no surprise to see a bit of a pullback, but as long as the Fed is seen as maintaining its current tightness, it will be hard-pressed to decline very much.
Good luck
Adf