Japan Foreign Reserves Fall For Third Month After Intervention

Foreign Reserves

Japan’s foreign reserves extended declines in October, following the previous month’s record drop, the Ministry of Finance said on Tuesday, reflecting the largest ever amount of yen-buying, dollar-selling interventionThe data comes alongside separate figures that confirmed Japan did not conduct stealth intervention in September and only entered the market to buy yen for U.S. dollars on Sept. 22 as announced, its first foray into the market to prop up the Japanese currency since 1998 Market players are scrutinising Japan’s vast pool of foreign assets and intervention records for clues on how much more Japan might be willing to spend in its forays into the currency market, though authorities remain tight-lipped on intervention. I wouldn’t be surprised if authorities conduct intervention one more time if dollar gains accelerate to hit new high beyond 152 yen,” said Tohru Sasaki, head of Japan Markets Research at JPMorgan Chase (NYSE:JPM) Bank.a

But I Don’t Think Japan Can Continue Large-Scale Intervention Selling U.S.

Treasuries to buy the yen indefinitely. There should be a limit given relations with its ally the United States.” Japanese officials have said they keep in close contact with U.S. counterparts, brushing aside speculation of U.S. opposition to dollar-selling intervention to weaken a currency while the United States is raising interest rates to battle inflation Japan’s foreign reserves fell for a third consecutive month to $1.19 trillion as at the end of October, still the world’s second-largest after China, the ministry said. The decline of $43.5 billion marked the second sharpest month-on-month on record.The currency intervention and rising foreign bond yields more than offset other factors that would support reserves, such as higher valuations of other foreign assets and income gains from foreign bond holdings, officials said. Graphic: Japan’s falling reserves -akpeqgwyepr/chart.png By asset type, foreign bonds – most of which are widely believed to be U.S. Treasuries, bought during bouts of dollar-buying intervention in the past when the yen was strong – account for four-fifths of the reserves.

Foreign Reserves

Of the Reserves, Foreign Bonds Fell The Most in September And Suffered The Second-Largest.

drop last month to $941 billion. Officials would not elaborate but market watchers interpret the drops as reflecting the sale of U.S. Treasuries for yen-buying intervention. Deposits – mostly parked at overseas central banks and the Bank for International Settlements, which make up some one-tenth of the reserves and can be readily converted into cash – grew for a second consecutive month to $137 billion in October. Separate data on intervention, which includes quarterly and daily totals, confirmed that authorities did not conduct stealth intervention in September, having spent 2.8 trillion yen that month to support the yen. Japan spent a record 6.35 trillion yen on intervention last month as the yen hit a 32-year low near 152 yen to the dollar. The yen has remained under pressure as the Bank of Japan remains committed to keeping ultra-low interest rates, in sharp contrast to aggressive rate hikes by the U.S. Federal Reserve.

Related Posts
Weekly Comic: China’s Precarious Reopening
China's Precarious

China’s dash for herd immunity from COVID-19 may not be the miracle cure for its economic ills that markets seem Read more

Major Fire Hits Chilean Port, Codelco Operations Unaffected
Chile fires

A major fire broke out at Chile's Ventanas port near a refinery and smelter belonging to state-run miner Codelco, but Read more

Asia FX Muted, yen Supported By Bets on Eventual BoJ Pivot
Asia FX muted

Most Asian currencies moved little on Monday as fears of a potential recession and rising COVID-19 cases in China weighed Read more

Inflation top Worry For G20 Countries -Survey
Countries -Survey

Runaway inflation, an unfolding debt crisis and cost-of-living problems pose the biggest threats to doing business for G20 countries in Read more

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x