The Korea Herald

Yen’s fragility raises specter of new currency war in Asia

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As the yen plumbs new lows, some investors are pondering an almost unthinkabl­e scenario in a region busy bolstering falling exchange rates — a series of competitiv­e devaluatio­ns that starts a new Asian currency war.

Suspected interventi­on to drag the yen off a 34-year low against the dollar is already seen as unlikely to have a lasting effect if Japan continues alone, raising the prospect of another bout of weakness in the beleaguere­d currency. That could push competitiv­e tensions with exporting neighbors South Korea and Taiwan to a peak — and heap pressure on China where chatter is already growing about the potential for a yuan devaluatio­n.

A destabiliz­ing slump in the yen could be the trigger that forces Japan’s neighbors to take extreme action, goes the theory, even if their efforts to date have been to prop up currencies instead of capitulati­ng and letting them slide. While a minority view and not one that suggests a repeat of the Asian financial crisis, it is still gaining some traction in a scenario where a resurgent dollar stays stronger for longer.

“We haven’t heard this word competitiv­e devaluatio­n for a long time,” said Henry Quek, head of global markets, Asia Pacific at State Street Corp. But “we are in a situation where there is a potential for a series of competitiv­e devaluatio­ns if the yen continues to weaken much, much further.”

While Asian central banks have been actively supporting their currencies against the dollar, the fall in the yen has been the worst in the region, eroding the export competitiv­eness of Japan’s close neighbors. That’s bound to grate even if the reasons for the yen’s decline are not exclusivel­y in Tokyo’s control — the wide gulf in interest rates between Japan and the rest of the world and an investor preference for US assets.

The yen fell to its lowest since 1992 against the yuan — the currency of Japan’s biggest trading partner — in late April. It is near the weakest versus the won since 2008 and at a 31-year low against the Taiwan dollar.

“It is happening,” said Kisoo Park, a senior portfolio manager at Manulife Investment Management, when asked about competitiv­e devaluatio­n. “Whether it’s intentiona­l or unintentio­nal devaluatio­n it is happening and it is having an impact on the rest of the region.”

Despite not having as strong an influence as in the past, a disorderly slump in the yen can still have a gravitatio­nal pull on the region’s currencies, according to market watchers.

“Most directly, a materially weaker yen will pull along with it other Asia foreign exchange like the Korean won and Taiwan dollar,” said Arjun Vij, a portfolio manager at JPMorgan Asset Management.

For Khoon Goh, head of Asia research at ANZ Group, the won and Taiwanese dollar will likely struggle to benefit from the artificial intelligen­ce investment boom in those countries until the yen turns the corner.

To be sure, there are signs that Japanese authoritie­s may not allow the country’s currency to slump further. After falling below the psychologi­cal milestone of 160 per dollar for the first time in over three decades early this month, two rounds of suspected official interventi­on have helped it stabilize to around the 155 level.

And there’s little concern about a financial crisis in the region with most Asian countries better equipped to avoid a repeat of the turbulence in the late 1990s. There are stronger stockpiles of foreign reserves, reforms from tighter financial sector oversight and deeper local capital markets.

But for Manulife’s Park, broad dollar strength and a yen slump to the 170 to 180 level would not only cause problems for Asia, but also impact emerging-market currencies more broadly.

“If Asian currencies devalue because of the strong dollar, the funds that invest in local markets will have to pull out,” he said. “The whole EM market will crash and that’s going to cause a risk-off event where Treasuries will rally and equities will sell off.” (Bloomberg)

 ?? Bloomberg ?? A customer places Japanese yen coins and a 5,000 yen banknote on a checkout counter while making a purchase at an Akidai YK supermarke­t in Tokyo, June 27, 2022.
Bloomberg A customer places Japanese yen coins and a 5,000 yen banknote on a checkout counter while making a purchase at an Akidai YK supermarke­t in Tokyo, June 27, 2022.

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