In This Article:
(Bloomberg) -- The yen fell below the psychological mark of 150 per dollar after robust US economic data led traders to dial back bets on Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts, boosting the greenback.
Most Read from Bloomberg
-
One City’s Plan to Re-Link a Neighborhood That Robert Moses Divided
-
Cities Look to AI to Flag Residents’ Trash and Recycling Mistakes
-
Chicago Should Consider Furloughs, Higher Booze Tax, Watchdog Says
-
A Broken Oil Pipeline Plunges South Sudan’s Capital Into Chaos
The currency dropped by 0.4% to end Thursday at 150.21 per dollar, the weakest closing level since July 30. The latest decline follows two straight weeks of drops for the yen as investors re-calibrated a slower narrowing of the yield gap between Japan and the US.
“The yen is under pressure amid a broad dollar bid on the strength of the US consumer,” said Skylar Montgomery Koning, a foreign-exchange strategist at Barclays Plc. “The yen is an underperformer within the complex because of the feed-through of strong US data to less dovish pricing for the Fed.”
After the release of the US retail sales and jobless claims data, swaps for the Fed’s January meeting suggest some 60 basis points of rate cuts, or slightly more than two quarter-point reductions across the next three US central bank meetings.
The outlook for the Japanese currency has changed, with new Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba suggesting earlier this month that the nation isn’t ready for higher rates, though he pulled back later to say he’s seeking to align with the Bank of Japan. Additional reports out of the US pointing to a resilient economy, pushing markets to price in a slower pace of monetary easing by the Fed, have also weighed on the yen.
The yen’s fall in October has again highlighted the risk of currency intervention by Japanese officials. Japan’s finance minister, Katsunobu Kato, recently said that sudden moves in the yen hurt companies and households, and that impact requires government scrutiny. The country’s chief currency official Atsushi Mimura also said that he was monitoring the foreign exchange market with a sense of urgency.
Investors now have the yen-centered carry trade top of mind, with some strategists seeing the currency depreciating even further beyond 150.
Even so, hedge funds are the most bullish on the yen since early 2021, according to Commodity Futures Trading Commission data for the week to Oct. 8. The yen’s weakness also comes on the back of rising stock prices both at home and abroad. Domestic stocks are rallying ahead of Japan’s general election on Oct. 27.