November 21, 2024
Yen Bulls Lie in Wait for US-Japan Yield Gap to Shrink Next Year #JapanFinance

Yen Bulls Lie in Wait for US-Japan Yield Gap to Shrink Next Year #JapanFinance

CashNews.co

(Bloomberg) — After two straight years seeing bets on a yen rebound turn into the cold reality of further declines, some strategists reckon the third time will be the charm for Japan’s beleaguered currency.

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The likelihood of a series of interest-rate hikes from the Bank of Japan and further cuts from the Federal Reserve will drive the Japanese currency’s recovery to as far as 130 against the dollar, according to some. The projections come with a high degree of caution, given the yen’s volatility through 2024, and the difficulty of anticipating how Donald Trump’s return to the White House may impact Fed policy and global markets.

A stronger yen would reverberate across asset classes, creating a drag for Japan’s equities while boosting the capacity of the nation’s cashed-up companies to make acquisitions abroad. Investors would also be less inclined to use the currency to fund investments in higher-yielding alternatives overseas and may be more willing to funnel money home.

“The US is expected to keep cutting interest rates as shown in the Fed’s dot plot, and the BOJ is expected to continue raising interest rates about once every six months, leading to a narrowing of the rate differentials between the US and Japan,” Masafumi Yamamoto and Masayoshi Mihara, strategists at Mizuho Securities Co., said in a note last week. “Not all of Trump’s policies will lead to a stronger dollar.”

The strategists at Mizuho predict the yen to surge to 130 against the greenback by the end of 2025 — a level not seen since early 2023. Their peers at Nomura Securities Co. and Saxo Markets see it rising as high as 140. It traded at 154.42 at 3:30 p.m. in Tokyo on Monday.

The bullish outlook for the yen next year is in stark contrast to the current situation.

Hedge funds were the most bearish on the yen since August in the run-up to the US presidential election, data released this month showed. This was quickly followed by the dollar scaling its highest since November 2022 against a basket of currencies on a rush of so-called Trump Trades in which investors positioned for trade duties, lower taxes and deregulation.

Leveraged funds increased their bearish yen wagers in the week ended Nov. 12, with short positions at the highest since July, according to the latest Commodity Futures Trading Commission data.

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