THE yen tumbled on Tuesday (Mar 19) after the Bank of Japan (BOJ) made a momentous, but widely anticipated, decision to end its negative-interest-rate policy, while the US dollar rose ahead of the upcoming Federal Reserve’s rate decision.
In a historic shift from decades of massive monetary stimulus, the BOJ ended eight years of negative interest rates and other remnants of unorthodox policy at the conclusion of a two-day policy meeting. Still, the yen dropped by as much as 1 per cent after the news, as most investors had already priced in a change. The yen last stood at 150.55 to the US dollar.
Against the euro, the Japanese currency similarly slid 0.7 per cent to 163.22, around its weakest in three weeks.
“It’s a classic ‘buy the rumour, sell the fact’,” said Bart Wakabayashi, Tokyo branch manager at State Street. “I don’t think the BOJ was going for the shock-and-awe approach this time.”
With Japan’s first interest-rate hike in 17 years, the BOJ said it would guide the overnight call rate – its new policy rate – in the range of zero to 0.1 per cent, adding that it expects “accommodative financial conditions” to be maintained for the time being.
That is likely to keep pressure on the yen, as interest rate differentials between Japan and the US remain stark.
MUFG currency strategist Lee Hardman said: “The market has taken it as a green light to increase the short yen positioning that was already in place, given the forward guidance from the BOJ was fairly cautious, and not really enough to draw further hawkish repricing in the Japanese rate market.”
This week brings a raft of central bank decisions that are dominating action in the currency market, headlined by the Fed.
The US central bank will deliver its decision on Wednesday, and is widely expected to keep rates where they are. But there is a degree of uncertainty over what policymakers might signal about the likely course of monetary policy stretching into 2025.
“Anytime the Fed and the BOJ are moving policy settings at about the same time, it’s always the Fed that rules and dominates the price action, even in US dollar/yen,” said Gareth Berry, Macquarie’s FX and rates strategist.
“So the BOJ’s decisions generally are, as far as the yen is concerned, a matter of secondary importance.”
The US dollar index, which measures the performance of the greenback against six others, rose 0.35 per cent on the day at 103.94.
A recent run of resilient US economic data has suggested inflation is still sticky enough to deter the Fed from cutting rates too much or too quickly this year, which has boosted the US dollar.
The Australian dollar dropped after the Reserve Bank of Australia left rates unchanged on Tuesday, as expected, but watered down its guidance over the likelihood of further rate hikes. The Aussie slid 0.7 per cent to a roughly two-week low of US$0.6513, dragging the New Zealand dollar down 0.67 per cent to US$0.6044.
Elsewhere, a broadly stronger US dollar pushed the euro and sterling to two-week lows. The euro was last down 0.2 per cent at US$1.0846, while sterling fell 0.4 per cent to US$1.2684. Against the yen, the pound gained 0.5 per cent to trade at 190.83.
In cryptocurrencies, Bitcoin fell by as much as 7 per cent to skim two-week lows, after last week’s record highs triggered some profit taking. Bitcoin, the largest cryptocurrency by market value, was last down 7 per cent at US$62,659, while Ether fell 8.7 per cent to US$3,204. REUTERS