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Re: JPY news

Posted: Tue Jul 16, 2024 9:38 pm
by ChuChu Rocket
Ogee wrote: Tue Jul 16, 2024 7:59 pm The Japanese Government Is Getting Desperate As The Yen Collapses

Powerful watch 😒

Re: JPY news

Posted: Tue Jul 16, 2024 10:50 pm
by Ogee
ChuChu Rocket wrote: Tue Jul 16, 2024 9:38 pm Powerful watch 😒
EU countries and UK not much better off, trade is down all over so not as much currency needing to be held.

ps, and we're doing it to ourselves, imagine being so retarded as to send your wealth creating industries overseas so you adhere to self imposed CO2 reduction targets, so the other country gets the wealth and produces twice as much carbon to make the product.

It's all part of the globalist's plan.


Re: JPY news

Posted: Wed Jul 17, 2024 6:06 pm
by moey_dw
JPY against all odds haha πŸ‘ŠπŸ‘ŠπŸ‘Š

Re: JPY news

Posted: Wed Jul 17, 2024 6:11 pm
by ChuChu Rocket
πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ πŸ‡―πŸ‡΅

USD/JPY descending! Come to papa 🀲


Re: JPY news

Posted: Wed Jul 17, 2024 7:44 pm
by Ogee
OFFICIALS NEED TO RESPOND IF SPECULATORS CAUSE EXCESSIVE FX MOVES




Reminder from a recent vid some of these regular BOJ interventions are costing $60 billion EACH, so there is actually a limit and yes, big holes are showing up in balance sheets hence the need to liquidate hundreds of billions of $ in held US treasuries to fill the holes (see todays News thread)

Re: JPY news

Posted: Thu Jul 18, 2024 3:36 pm
by ChuChu Rocket
πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ πŸ‡―πŸ‡΅ ドル円 USD/JPY -1.18% price is 156.296

Yen strength continues to increase against the USD so there is hope πŸ™

Will it bounce off the Weekly trend line? πŸ€”


Re: JPY news

Posted: Wed Jul 24, 2024 10:40 pm
by Ogee
News Articles / Reuters / Analysis-Investors foxed by Japan's revamped FX intervention blueprint

Analysis-Investors foxed by Japan's revamped FX intervention blueprint
Jul 24th, 11:51:32
By Amanda Cooper and Brigid Riley

LONDON/TOKYO (Reuters) - Japanese official buying to defend the yen is fast becoming a standard feature of the FX landscape in 2024, but authorities in Tokyo have switched up their methods, making it even trickier for investors to second-guess when and how they might step in.

The novel intervention tactics may have wrongfooted traders enough to help Japan's financial authorities turn the tide on their currency, which hit its weakest against the dollar since 1986 just four weeks ago.

The Bank of Japan, at the Ministry of Finance's behest, likely spent nearly 6 trillion yen ($38.4 billion) this month in shoring up the yen.

As the dollar traded at 38-year highs around 160 yen two weeks ago, authorities in Tokyo warned almost daily they would step in should volatility prove excessive or the level of the Japanese currency not reflect the underlying economic and monetary-policy reality. Another round of intervention was, therefore, hardly a surprise.

There has been no official confirmation of intervention, but when the first round of a one-two punch arrived on July 11, traders believe the BOJ pounced on weak U.S. inflation data that hit the dollar - selling dollars into the slide in the U.S. currency, rather than into weakness in the yen.

The dollar/yen pair, which is now below 155 yen, dropped in minutes to around 158.3 from 161, immediately raising suspicion among traders of intervention.

"It appears the MOF and BOJ may have turned 'momentum trader', grabbing their moment to hit the market when it was at its most vulnerable," Chris Weston, market strategist at Pepperstone said at the time.

Typically, the BOJ would step in when U.S. Treasury yields and the dollar were rising.

"This time wasn't like that. In fact, it was during a sell-off of the dollar, which caused dollar/yen to drop, that we saw this unusual shift in the yen," Hiroyuki Machida, director of Japan FX and commodities sales at ANZ, said.


"Assuming that the dramatic and abrupt movement of the yen over a short span of time was a result of intervention, then it was indeed unlike patterns we’ve seen in the past," Machida said.

A second round of suspected official buying on July 12 made investors nervous enough that another rally in the yen on July 15 was initially pinned on intervention that market data subsequently showed had most likely not taken place.

Bank of America, which has argued for some time that the BOJ could opt for routine intervention, like the Swiss National Bank, say Japanese authorities may have had three aims in mind: maximising the impact, upping the element of surprise and warding off any excess speculative moves.

JOB DONE?

It seems to have worked. The yen has strengthened by almost 4% this month and options positioning is starting to shift.

Traders are less confident than they have been for some time that the yen is on a one-way street to more weakness.

The derivatives market shows the premium in the price of options to buy the yen in one month's time is growing relative to the price of sell options - an indication that traders are turning more bullish.

The principal driver of the 30% drop in the yen in the last four years has been the discount in interest rates in Japan to those elsewhere, but, most notably, in the United States.

The BOJ meets on July 31 to set monetary policy and a very mixed bag of economic data means the chances of a hike from 0.1% are about 50/50.

The Federal Reserve, meanwhile, is all but certain to cut rates by a quarter point when it meets in September to a range of 5.00-5.25%.

MUFG FX strategist Lee Hardman said July's moves in the currency "suggest a change in strategy from Japan to be more proactive rather than reactive when providing support for the yen."

Speculators still hold one of the biggest bets against the yen on record. At nearly $12 billion, it has more than doubled since the start of 2024 alone.

ANZ's Machida said with a bearish position of this size, the prospect of more unpredictable intervention was "terrifying."

"It's incredibly painful. You might have been sitting pretty, thinking you’d made a profit at 161 yen, but now it's at 156 yen. If the Bank of Japan were to step in at this level, at 156 yen, you’d probably just want to throw in the towel."

($1 = 156.1000 yen)

(Additional reporting by Kevin Buckland in Tokyo; Editing by Toby Chopra)

Re: JPY news

Posted: Thu Jul 25, 2024 5:04 pm
by ChuChu Rocket
πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ πŸ‡―πŸ‡΅

USDJPY has just reached a critical support area.

This pair will continue to fall. No bounce, momentum is just too strong πŸ‘‡


Re: JPY news

Posted: Thu Aug 01, 2024 4:26 pm
by Ogee
Japan's Central Bank Just Hiked Rates WHILE in a Recession


Re: JPY news

Posted: Thu Aug 01, 2024 5:58 pm
by boytoy
Ogee wrote: Thu Aug 01, 2024 4:26 pm Japan's Central Bank Just Hiked Rates WHILE in a Recession

It worked though in terms of currency value lol