Wage Slave wrote:On the plus side Japan has a good record when it comes to quickly digging themselves out of a very deep economic hole provided they get the necessary minimum support to do the job.
You mean a lot of experience?

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Wage Slave wrote:On the plus side Japan has a good record when it comes to quickly digging themselves out of a very deep economic hole provided they get the necessary minimum support to do the job.
Japan posted its biggest trade surplus in over four years in February ...
TOKYO (AP) — Japan posted its biggest trade surplus in over four years in February, thanks to a strengthening in the yen and weak oil prices, though both imports and exports fell, suggesting persisting slack demand both in Japan and overseas.
Preliminary data reported Thursday showed exports fell 4 percent from a year earlier to 5.7 trillion yen ($50.5 billion) in February and imports dropped 14 percent to 5.46 trillion yen ($48.4 billion).
The resulting 242.8 billion yen ($2.2 billion) surplus compares with a deficit of 426 billion yen a year earlier and a deficit of 648.8 billion yen in January. It was the biggest surplus since September 2011.
Samurai_Jerk wrote:Japan posted its biggest trade surplus in over four years in February ...
TOKYO (AP) — Japan posted its biggest trade surplus in over four years in February, thanks to a strengthening in the yen and weak oil prices, though both imports and exports fell, suggesting persisting slack demand both in Japan and overseas.
Preliminary data reported Thursday showed exports fell 4 percent from a year earlier to 5.7 trillion yen ($50.5 billion) in February and imports dropped 14 percent to 5.46 trillion yen ($48.4 billion).
The resulting 242.8 billion yen ($2.2 billion) surplus compares with a deficit of 426 billion yen a year earlier and a deficit of 648.8 billion yen in January. It was the biggest surplus since September 2011.
wagyl wrote:Exports down, imports down way more. Shrinking. In the right direction for certain statistics, but whether it is the right direction for the future economic health, is another issue.
wagyl wrote:Exports down, imports down way more. Shrinking. In the right direction for certain statistics, but whether it is the right direction for the future economic health, is another issue.
legion wrote:
Whatever happens with the Japanese numbers people find a way to put a slant on it...
canman wrote:Man, the yen is getting killed these past two days. It seems investors are ready to punish Japan for not pushing more QE. But for once I think this was the right move. I wonder how high the yen will climb though!
wuchan wrote:Sorry.... /rant
wuchan wrote:... Sorry.... /rant
wuchan wrote:A reason that Australia didn't choose Japan for the sub deal was Mitsubishi wanted to construct most of the subs here in Japan then assemble them in AUS where the rest of the bidders were OK with doing most of the work in AUS. Japan is unwilling to work with the rest of the world. It's our way or the highway.
wuhan wrote:... And I guess that's the problem right there, Japan isn't willing to change. Earthquakes, tsunamis, financial meltdown, rampant corruption, loss of freedom, more work for less money and even a fucking nuclear disaster and there still has been little meaningful change. The Japanese people are so fucking afraid of being bread out by letting foreign companies and interests in that they are willing to let the economy die ...
Russell wrote:wuchan wrote:Sorry.... /rant
Actually, it makes a lot of sense...
Takechanpoo wrote:it was only Abe and his henchmen who wanted the submarine deal.
mitsubishi, kawasaki and SDF guys and also most of j-netizens did NOT.
most of japanese dont trust aussie government, which is almost a china's whore, and had thought one of j-military secret, which is a pivot tech for j-defence against china, will leak via that blatantly pro-china government if japan got the deal.
kurogane wrote:Russell wrote:wuchan wrote:Sorry.... /rant
Actually, it makes a lot of sense...
So much so I want a hard copy of that. Could you Fax it to me?![]()
Great rant, man. Seconded, passed.
Wage Slave wrote:kurogane wrote:Russell wrote:wuchan wrote:Sorry.... /rant
Actually, it makes a lot of sense...
So much so I want a hard copy of that. Could you Fax it to me?![]()
Great rant, man. Seconded, passed.
And yet, the Yen rises - And that means people are buying more Yen. If we think the transnational demand for Yen is flat at best or more likely declining then people must be buying Yen as a store of value or to invest in Japan. Somehow, and it is impossible to understand why, Japan and the Yen are seen as a safe haven in an uncertain world. Even though interest rates are so close to zero it doesn't matter, even though all that was said about the economy and Japanese companies is true money flows inwards to buy Yen.
wuchan wrote:Since 1995 the yen has averaged between 110 and 120 to $1 about 80% of the time which gives the players in the market some kind of "confidence" that that's where it will end up in the end allowing them to not get fucked when other currencies tank. The pound has only lost value to the dollar over the same period.
Wage Slave wrote:wuchan wrote:Since 1995 the yen has averaged between 110 and 120 to $1 about 80% of the time which gives the players in the market some kind of "confidence" that that's where it will end up in the end allowing them to not get fucked when other currencies tank. The pound has only lost value to the dollar over the same period.
Don't see it ...But that doesn't mean people don't believe it.
wuchan wrote:The other problem is forex isn't really tied to anything real, it's total speculation and the market is based on news and rumors.
Wage Slave wrote:And yet, the Yen rises - ........
This country's not even in Europe, but may get walloped by Brexit anyhow
Tokyo, we have a problem.
Last week, market tumult stemming from the U.K.'s vote to quit the European Union drove the British pound to its weakest levels in three decades.
Yet it also sent investors flocking to traditional safe haven assets like the U.S. dollar, gold and the yen, the latter surging against every major currency as the results of Brexit became clear: Dollar/yen (: OSEJPY=)spiked from a Thursday high near 107 to a two-year low near 99. Meanwhile, the pound lost more than 8 percent against the yen (Exchange: JPYGBP=) and the euro (Exchange: EURJPY=) shed more than four percent to hit a three-and-a-half-year low.
The currency's strength was enough to prompt the Japanese government to hold an emergency meeting on Monday, Reuters reported, in order to craft a strategy to counteract yen strength. In currency market parlance, that suggests the Bank of Japan (BoJ) could intervene at any time to sell the very yen traders are trying to buy—something the central bank already does on a frequent basis.
Japan needs a weaker yen to boost the economy, but at least for the moment investors need a safe haven even more. So which impulse will win the tug of war?
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