Millennium Post

Trump comments on Japan, China currencies rattle markets

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TOKYO: Japan is not deliberate­ly weakening the yen to boost its exports, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said on Wednesday when asked in parliament about President Donald Trump’s accusation­s of currency manipulati­on.

Abe is expected to meet with Trump in Washington on February 10. He said Japan would again explain to the US side its unpreceden­ted monetary easing policies, which have pulled the yen lower against the dollar in recent years.

“The criticism that our policies are intended to direct the yen lower is undeserved,” Abe told fellow lawmakers.

Instead they are aimed at spurring inflation, he said.

During a meeting with pharmaceut­ical executives on Tuesday, Trump complained about drug makers shifting production overseas and said his trade policies would end unfair “global freeloadin­g,” according to a transcript of the meeting.

He blamed regulation­s and devaluatio­n by other countries.

“Every other country lives on devaluatio­n,” he said. “You look at what China’s doing, you look at what Japan has done over the years . ... They play the money market, they play the devaluatio­n market and we sit there like a bunch of dummies.”

Trump occasional­ly has railed against Japan’s trade surplus with the US, which fell 4.6 per cent last year from a year earlier to USD 60.2 billion, according to preliminar­y Japanese trade figures.

The yen’s value fell steadily after Japan’s central bank implemente­d massive monetary easing four years ago, hoping to counter deflation and get peo- ple and businesses to spend more money.

Injecting massive amounts of cash into the economy caused the yen’s value to fall from about 80 yen to the dollar to a low of about 125 yen to the dollar in mid-2015.

Trump is not the only critic of that trend toward a weaker yen. But Japan generally has won grudging acceptance of its unorthodox monetary policies from its major trading partners.

The dollar was trading near 100 yen in August but has surged recently, partly because the Federal Reserve is gradually raising interest rates and partly because investors are betting on bigger returns from investment­s under Trump’s administra­tion.

After Trump’s comments, the dollar briefly weakened against the yen. But by late on Wednesday in Asia, it was at 113.45 yen, above its previous close of 112.94 yen. Trump also singled out China’s currency. For many years, U.S. officials complained that Beijing was keeping the yuan artificial­ly low to make its products more competitiv­e in overseas markets. But more recently, Chinese regulators have been striving to prevent the currency from weakening too quickly.

There was no immediate reaction to Trump’s comments from Beijing, where financial markets and government offices are closed this week for the lunar new year coming holidays.

The criticism that our policies are intended to direct the yen lower is undeserved,” Abe told fellow lawmakers.

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