Get App
Download App Scanner
Scan to Download
Advertisement
This Article is From Apr 02, 2024

BofA Sees Yen Plunging To 160 Per Dollar If U.S. Fed Delays Cuts

BofA Sees Yen Plunging To 160 Per Dollar If U.S. Fed Delays Cuts
Japanese 10,000 yen banknotes.
STOCKS IN THIS STORY
Goenka Business & Finance Ltd.
--
Cosco (India) Ltd.
--
Nifty Capital Markets
--
Nifty Top 20 Equal Weight
--
MSCI World
--
Pritika Auto Industries Ltd
--
SAB Events & Governance Now Media Ltd.
--
MSCI AC Asia ex-Japan
--
BSE Finance
--
MSCI AC Asia ex-Japan
--

The yen could slide to hit 160 per dollar unless the Federal Reserve cuts interest rates this year, according to Bank of America Corp.

Any intervention from the Bank of Japan to try to prop the currency up will be ineffective until the US starts easing monetary policy, says the bank's global head of Group-of-10 currency strategy Thanos Vamvakidis. The yen has already hit three-decade lows and is flirting with the 152 per dollar level that many say would force Japanese authorities to act.

Intervention “is very likely but it would be more like leaning against the wind,” Vamvakidis said in an interview on Bloomberg Television. He sees the yen rallying to 142 if the US central bank does go ahead with cuts, as expected by markets.

It's a view that chimes with other strategists who anticipate any BOJ intervention to only offer brief support to the yen. The currency has already weakened beyond levels that prompted authorities to enter the market in 2022, and officials have ramped up warnings against speculative moves.

“They know very well from past experience that these interventions don't work,” Vamvakidis said. “It's mostly a threat to create some caution and two-way risk in the market, they know everything depends on the Fed.”

Read more: Japan Intervention Would Target 5-Yen Rally, Strategists Say

The yen held its ground at around 151.65 per dollar on Tuesday, after falling to a 34-year low near 152 last week. It's lost 7% this year, making it one of the worst-performing G-10 currencies.

The outlook for the yen is dependent on the path of Fed cuts because of the wide interest-rate gap between the US and Japan, which makes Japanese assets less attractive. While traders expect around 65 basis points of US easing in 2024, that's heavily scaled back from bets on more than 150 basis points of cuts at the start of this year.

--With assistance from Guy Johnson and Kriti Gupta.

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

©2024 Bloomberg L.P.

Essential Business Intelligence, Continuous LIVE TV, Sharp Market Insights, Practical Personal Finance Advice and Latest Stories — On NDTV Profit.

Newsletters

Update Email
to get newsletters straight to your inbox
⚠️ Add your Email ID to receive Newsletters
Note: You will be signed up automatically after adding email

News for You

Set as Trusted Source
on Google Search