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Japan won’t intervene unless yen slides below 155, says Watanabe

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TOKYO: Japanese authoritie­s likely won’t intervene in the currency market unless the yen plunges below 155 to the US dollar, former top currency diplomat Hiroshi Watanabe says.

Markets are on alert for the chance of yen-buying interventi­on by Japanese authoritie­s as the currency slides near the 152 level, where they last stepped into the market in 2022.

But Watanabe, who oversaw Japan’s currency policy from 2004 to 2007, said the chance of interventi­on was slim for now since the yen’s declines have been within a broad range unlike in 2022, when the currency was falling more sharply.

While markets may be focusing on whether the dollar will rise above 152 yen, Japanese authoritie­s likely won’t see any break above that level alone as a strong enough reason to intervene, he told Reuters in an interview.

“At current levels, I don’t think authoritie­s will intervene. They probably won’t step in unless the yen makes a sudden plunge below 155 to the dollar,” said Watanabe who, as vice-finance minister for internatio­nal affairs oversaw Japan’s currency policy from 2004 to 2007.

The 155 line would be a psychologi­cally important level and a break above it would draw a lot of media attention, thereby heightenin­g the chance of interventi­on especially if the yen’s declines are big, Watanabe said.

“The dollar/yen is likely to move in a range of 145-155 for the time being,” partly because the interest-rate gap between the United States and Japan will remain wide, he said.

The yen has been on a downtrend despite the Bank of Japan’s (BOJ) decision last month to end eight years of negative interest rates, as traders interprete­d its dovish language as signalling that the next rate hike will be some time away.

The dollar stood at 151.70 yen on Thursday, hugging a tight range after last week’s spike to a 34-year high of 151.975 yen that triggered warnings by Japanese authoritie­s on the chance of interventi­on.

With the BOJ likely to hold off on raising rates aggressive­ly, Japanese borrowing costs will remain low and keep the yen under downward pressure, Watanabe said.

There were other reasons that could prevent a sharp yen rebound including the fact that many Japanese firms no longer repatriate the profits they earn overseas, and instead spend them on investment abroad, he said.

“Even if Japan’s economy improves, that won’t necessaril­y lead to a strong yen,” Watanabe added.

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