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kurogane wrote:Okay, I am confused again. The BoJ announces its latest sleight of hand which apparently whacked the CAD for unknown reasons unknown (as in a known unknown not yet known), and then the CAD rose against the yen, going from 80~ last week to 86~~ just yesterday and today.
Which means, go the Jpn PO and withdraw CAD. That much I get.
kurogane wrote:Okay, I am confused again. The BoJ announces its latest sleight of hand which apparently whacked the CAD for unknown reasons unknown (as in a known unknown not yet known), and then the CAD rose against the yen, going from 80~ last week to 86~~ just yesterday and today.
Which means, go the Jpn PO and withdraw CAD. That much I get.
kurogane wrote:but when I get down about it I remember how much it has cost our MIA member IPU for not withdrawing soon enough. And then I feel better.
Yen speculators got burned again by Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda.
The currency held losses against most of its major peers and bond yields dropped to fresh records on Monday after Kuroda unexpectedly announced a negative interest-rate strategy on Friday, setting off the yen’s biggest drop against the dollar since October 2014. The move hammered hedge funds and other large speculators that had built up the most bullish yen position in almost four years as a rout in global stocks spurred demand for havens. Australia’s dollar weakened after China’s official purchasing managers index dropped to a three-year low.
“The BOJ decision will have a lasting negative impact on yen because speculative positioning was the wrong way and Kuroda’s battle to reach agreement on negative rates raises the risks of further action in months to come,” said Sean Callow, a foreign-exchange strategist in Sydney at Westpac Banking Corp. “Negative rates in Japan are a bigger deal than any given month’s China PMIs.”
Wage Slave wrote:Naughty BoJ .......
FG Lurker wrote:It actually is a fairly big deal. There has been a lot of expectation that recent economic uncertainty/volatility would lead to a stronger yen, as has consistently been the case over the past 7 or 8 years. It has been such a consistent thing that it's become nearly automatic, and as such there were a lot of large institutional investors who were long JPY when the negative rate announcement came out. I don't know if part of Kuroda's goal was to fuck over speculators aiming for a stronger yen but it will likely create some caution in currency markets, a stronger JPY is no longer a sure thing when everything else is going to shit.
There is also some speculation now that this is just the first move into negative rates for the BOJ and that Kuroda may push for more depending on how 2016 unfolds.
kurogane wrote:BTW, Fg L, I get what you are saying, but do you actually think such scumbags, errrr, sorry.....Investors, have anything to complain about, or are you just outlining the significance of the development?
Wage Slave wrote:Naughty BoJ for not falling into line with what institutional investors had decided was their plan for the value of the Yen.
Wage Slave wrote:I never, given Japan's obvious fiscal weaknesses, understood why Yen holdings were seen as a safe haven. If the interest rate does go negative more broadly, then that will put the final kibosh on that notion.
FG Lurker wrote:My understanding is that a lot of the reason for the "safe haven" status is that Japan has a large trade surplus -- more money comes in than goes out every month.
Between 1980 and 2010 Japan recorded a trade surplus every year. But since the Fukushima nuclear disaster in March 2011, imports have surged due to the weakening of the Japanese yen and increased purchases of fossil fuels and gas. As a result in 2014 trade deficit was the worst on record. In 2014, the biggest trade surpluses were recorded with: United States, Hong Kong, South Korea, Taiwan and Singapore. The biggest trade deficits were recorded with: China, Saudi Arabia, Australia, United Arab Emirates, Russia and Malaysia. This page provides - Japan Balance of Trade - actual values, historical data, forecast, chart, statistics, economic calendar and news. Japan Balance of Trade - actual data, historical chart and calendar of releases - was last updated on February of 2016.
Wage Slave wrote:Naughty BoJ for not falling into line with what institutional investors had decided was their plan for the value of the Yen.
I never, given Japan's obvious fiscal weaknesses, understood why Yen holdings were seen as a safe haven. If the interest rate does go negative more broadly, then that will put the final kibosh on that notion.
Wage Slave wrote: Trust is a tricky thing to recover.
kurogane wrote:Wage Slave wrote: Trust is a tricky thing to recover.
Very nice points and analysis, but taking it one way, it strikes me how weird the world has become when the Mother of All Banks is in a position where it is even suggested they need to "regain trust" from the clientele they are charged to regulate (whether you meant it that way or not). Assuming they are operating legally, diligently and according to their estimation of the nation's best interests, this reminds me of that poem by that Milton guy where one quite senior underling decided he shouldn't have to obey his boss because he thought he was equally snazzy and clever. Other than a really good Peter Cook & Dudley Moore movie that didn't work out very well, if I recall.
Wage Slave wrote: I've felt for a while that real reform will only come when there is a full scale shoganai moment. A cap in hand trip to the IMF might well be the tonic that revives.
kurogane wrote:Other than a really good Peter Cook & Dudley Moore movie that didn't work out very well, if I recall.
Wage Slave wrote: And something like a viable future - I would take some persuading that isn't the case and it wasn't the case in about 1976.
Men make their own history, but they do not make it as they please; they do not make it under self-selected circumstances, but under circumstances existing already, given and transmitted from the past. The tradition of all dead generations weighs like a nightmare on the brains of the living.
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