Wednesday, August 4

The Yen: A Little Less Conversation, A Little More Action?

The value of the yen just hit its highest level against the U.S. dollar since Nov. 27 at 85.32, which is close to its 15-year high of 84.82.

While recent news from Japanese exporters has been relatively positive, a higher value yen could threaten Japan's fragile economic recovery. A strong yen makes the price of Japanese exports less attractive in key foreign markets, such as the U.S.

In the past simple jawboning by Japanese officials has proven effective at 'talking down' the yen. On cue Yoshihiko Noda -- Japan's eighth Finance Minister in the past three years -- said that he is “closely watching” the currency market and that the yen’s current movement “is a little one-sided”. And as I write the yen is trading off a bit to 86.24.

However, given the serious discussion of QE 2.0 or QE Lite in the U.S., will talk alone be enough to keep the yen from rising this time?

Some Japanese exporters already appear to be looking for 'a little less conversation, a little more action' from the Bank of Japan. Yesterday Nissan Motor Co. Chief Operating Officer Toshiyuki Shiga said "with the current rate there would be an impact on our orders for export. I hope each country will cooperate to minimize the impact of the yen’s strength, and I hope the government (Japanese) will make such efforts.”

The last time the Bank of Japan intervened in a significant way was in 2004. I recently interviewed Axel Merk, portfolio manager of the $500 million Merk Currency mutual funds. Merk contrasted the Bank of Japan's currency prowess with the recent ineffectual efforts of the Swiss National Bank (SNB), which failed miserably in its attempts to halt the rise in the Swiss Franc against the Euro. Unlike the SNB, the Bank of Japan can "do real damage" to the value of the yen. Earlier this year Merk removed the yen from his list of "hard currencies" when it appeared the government might finally get organized enough to put pressure on the Bank of Japan to devalue the yen.

I wouldn't expect Bank of Japan intervention unless the yen breaches the 84.83 level for a sustained period. For investors, there are several yen ETFs to choose from.

In the meantime, here's Elvis:

No comments:

Post a Comment