From a medium-term perspective, there will be a continuing lack of confidence in the Japanese fundamentals as the debt burden continues to increase and the government is forced to maintain a highly-expansionary fiscal policy. The Bank of Japan will also maintain a very aggressive monetary policy to help support the economy. The yen will also lose support when risk appetite improves with strong interest in carry trades. The Japanese currency will still gain support at times, especially as exporter selling will also increase at higher dollar levels.
The yen remained under pressure for much of the week and dipped to fresh 2011 lows near 85.50 against the dollar before finding some relief. There was a further increase in US Treasury yields which put upward pressure on the dollar.
The Bank of Japan left interest rates at the 0.00 - 0.10% range at the latest policy meeting and also announced that JPY1trn in loans would be made available to alleviate cash shortages following the earthquake. The yen gained some support from relief that an even more aggressive policy was resisted.
There was pressure for a yen correction after recent sharp losses and exporters were also taking advantage of the dollar’s rally and selling into strength. Brazil’s announcement of further measures to curb capital inflows sparked fears over reduced demand for emerging-market assets which also provided some yen support.
The latest Finance Ministry data recorded net buying of overseas bonds by Japanese investors following the March earthquake which will tend to dampen expectations of capital repatriation and this will tend to be a negative factor for the Japanese currency.
Sterling:
Recent economic data has been mixed and there is likely to be greater confidence over a strong first-quarter recovery in the economy. There will also be fears that underlying demand will continue to fade, especially with consumer spending under sustained pressure as real incomes decline and fiscal policy is tightened. The Bank of England is likely to increase interest rates slightly, but growth and debt fears will certainly restrain the central bank and interest rates are likely to remain negative in real terms which will be a negative Sterling influence. The currency will find it difficult to make much headway and will be vulnerable to heavy selling if banking fears intensify again.
Sterling found support below the 1.60 level against the dollar following the US payroll data late last week and the currency gradually pushed higher to re-challenge 2011 highs as the US currency remained under pressure. The Euro found it hard to stay above the 0.88 level.
The PMI services index rose to 57.1 for March from 52.6 the previous month. This was a 13-month high for the index and much stronger than expected, although business optimism did actually decline slightly.
The other data was mixed as there was a sharp 1.2% decline in UK industrial production for February following a revised 0.3% increase previously while manufacturing output stalled. The Halifax house-price index was marginally lower than expected with a 0.1% monthly increase for March.
The Bank of England left interest rates on hold at 0.50% and also held quantitative easing at GBP200bn. This was the expected outcome, although there had been some speculation over a hike and the UK currency weakened following the announcement.
There was no statement and the vote split will not be released for 2 weeks when the minutes will be published. The next focus will be on inflation pressures with the producer prices data due to be released on Friday followed by the consumer inflation data on Tuesday. |