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Catoneinutica wrote:Punchy, I too scoffed, but the MOF mandarins have been running Japan since the war, so I made a note of it when he said it. And it's a lot closer to being true now then it was five years ago, wouldn't you say? Unless some kind of Black Swan event happens, like a collapse of the J-bond mkt, then 50 is on its way by 2013. Will you be ready? Are you ready now?
-catone
-to party, I mean.
when everyone starts predicting the yen can only go up
it's gotta go down
gaijinpunch wrote:I would say that yes it is closer than it was, since 120 > 70 > 50. However, other key notes like, "all time high/low" are key notes in the financial world. This place is barely sustainable as it is. As it goes lower, prices will deflate even more than they are (which is killing the place), larger companies will start moving more stuff off shore to offset the crazy prices, unemployment rises, etc. etc.
It's a slippery slope. I'm not saying we've hit the bottom and I don't think we'll go anywhere North until the US and Europe pulls their heads out of their asses, but if it goes to 50 (that's 33% stronger than it's strongest in history) something is going to pop, and the inevitable happens. Not sure exactly what that is, but Japan is a Jenga puzzle at the moment. One thing moves, and the proverbial game over screen appears.
This.
Catoneinutica wrote:A Finance Ministry bureaucrat who now works as a "consultant" told us in 2008 that 50 JPY/USD would happen within the next five years, and as we get closer to 2013 events seem to be validating his prediction.
Russell wrote:50 JPY/USD??? You heard it first here:
http://www.fuckedgaijin.com/forums/showpost.php?p=278830&postcount=589
(should have become a Finance Ministry bureaucrat...)
Someone wanna know when the rapture will be?
Catoneinutica wrote:What are the odds of the Yen hitting 50 against the USD within two years. I'm going with a bold prediction of even odds.
gaijinpunch wrote:No shit, I had a dream that the yen went to 60 on the first two days of my vacation (when I was away from the computer). No dream of mine ever comes true. Hopefully this one won't either.
IparryU wrote:i had a dream that the USD went shit vs JPY and fucked my life up...
tone wrote:c'mon 85!! here we go, big cascading sell off, here we go!!
its like when i bring up how nice it would be to hit 85-90 most japanese people feel the high yen is a point of pride, not realizing its cutting into a lot of businesses here - and no one i know is really bohemian enough to take 6 month round the world trips and benefit in the major way of using a yen based bank account to fund travel abroad where shit is cheap right now with the yen up so high.
tone wrote:its like when i bring up how nice it would be to hit 85-90 most japanese people feel the high yen is a point of pride
chokonen888 wrote:Well, my tour business should benefit from this some....actually, none of my sales are USD anymore so the further it dives, the better it is for me.
Samurai_Jerk wrote:You must know some real morons. Most J-people I talk to know it's bad for Japan and for most of Japan's industries.
The US Treasury on Tuesday criticized Japan's interventions to halt the yen's rise in the last six months, saying they were unnecessary and that Tokyo would do better to strengthen its domestic economy and competitiveness.
In a report to Congress on foreign exchange markets, the Treasury said it had supported the interventions to stabilize the yen in the wake of the devastating March 11 earthquake-tsunami disaster.
But interventions that began in August and went through November, aimed at halting the yen's rise amid economic turmoil in Europe and the United States, were unjustified, the Treasury said.
"In contrast to the G-7 joint post-earthquake intervention in March, the United States did not support these interventions," it said.
"It is worth noting that these operations took place at a time when foreign exchange market activity and risk aversion were being predominantly influenced by financial developments elsewhere in the global economy that were impacting all of the major currencies."
-snip-
"Rather than reacting to domestic 'strong yen' concerns by intervening to try to influence the exchange rate, Japan should take fundamental and thoroughgoing steps to increase the dynamism of the domestic economy, increase the competitiveness of Japanese firms -- including those in utilities and services -- and raise potential growth."
Samurai_Jerk wrote:If it goes to 60 though, everyone but FX traders betting against the dollar will be uber-fucked.
Catoneinutica wrote:A prediction for 2012 someone at Zerohedge pulled out of his ass:
-The Yen will (finally) weaken. The low for the USDYEN will be 76.5 the high will be 90. (It's a great short). The problem for Japan will be its 200% debt to GDP. Global investors will shun the Japanese bond markets. Ten-year yields will rise to over 2% as a result. While Japan has gotten away with its excessive debt for years and global investors always had reasons to park cash in Japanese Government Bonds (JGBs), there will be no reasons left in 2012.
http://www.zerohedge.com/contributed/2012-things-will-happen
Russell wrote:That was my prediction. Believe at your own risk...
Coligny wrote:And whut exactly would that mean ? (aside from cheap IPods...)
chokonen888 wrote:You should furikomi me all your yens to my US bank account when it rises to 200yen per dollar and I keep that in my bank so I can go back home, booze my life away, and buy herds of goats for Greji.
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