The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Yen shorts crumble as hot FX trade comes to end

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TOKYO: The juiciest profits from betting against the yen, one of the hottest macro trades of 2022, is a thing of the past, a growing cohort of strategist­s say.

Three key pillars of the sell-the-yen trade, a widening Us-japan interest-rate gap, soaring oil prices and the loss of the currency’s haven status, are crumbling as growing recessiona­ry fears keep a cap on yields, put pressure on crude and send investors back into the arms of traditiona­l safe assets.

Dollar-yen, which soared 38% from a March 2020 through to mid-july this year, is in retreat.

“The big yen short as we have known it this year, it’s over,” said Rodrigo Catril, a strategist at National Australia Bank Ltd in Sydney. “Dollar-yen’s peak is now likely behind us.”

Catril is joined by the likes of Rabobank and Daiwa Securities Group Inc in predicting a slowdown in losses for Japan’s currency, the worst performer in the Group of 10 this year.

Strategist­s see the yen strengthen­ing to 130 against the United States dollar on average by the first quarter of 2023, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, a clear contrast with calls arguing that 140 and higher lay ahead at the peak of the bearishnes­s in mid-july.

An end to what threatened to become the worst-ever drawdown for the currency would be welcomed by businesses to consumers to politician­s in Japan, where higher import costs are weighing on a post-pandemic recovery.

It would vindicate the resolutely dovish stance of Bank of Japan governor Haruhiko Kuroda and put pressure on hedge funds who came late to popular short-yen macro strategies.

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