Ledger-Enquirer

Japan’s yen falls to 34-year low against US dollar

- BY CLYDE HUGHES UPI.com

The Japanese yen tumbled to its lowest mark against the U.S. dollar since 1990 on Wednesday, temporaril­y sliding to the 151.97-per-dollar level as investors continued to sell the country’s currency.

The yen, which has struggled against the dollar for years, appeared to be affected by concerns over a relaxed monetary environmen­t as investors purchased more dollars in response. Before trading ended, the yen regained some of its ground to lift it beyond the 34-year low.

“Given there is a precedent and the fall to 34year lows, it was inevitable for the market to be cautious about a possible interventi­on,” Takuya Kanda, senior researcher at the Gaitame.com Research Institute, said, according to Kyodo News.

While Japan’s Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki promised to take “decisive action” against the growing weakness of the yen, it did little to calm fears among investors who worried about a prolonged shrinkage of the yen. His comments suggested that the government may purchase yen itself to prop up the current for the first time since October 2022.

Japan ended its negative interest rate policy on March 19, which was something it used to fight deflation. The country has used that financial tool since 2007.

Nomura Securities said analysts predict a dollaryen exchange rate of from 149 and 153 to the dollar.

“If expectatio­ns for an additional rate hike in July rise, there could be upward pressures on the Japanese yet,” a securities report said, according to Nikkei Asia.

In the meantime, Japan’s central bank, the Bank of Japan, continues to face pressure to respond to improve the yen’s standing.

“While the BOJ have both rate hikes and quantitati­ve tightening as policy tightening tools, quantitati­ve tightening could be a better tool,” the bank wrote.

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