Yen Strength And RBNZ: What To Expect

 | Aug 08, 2018 21:26

By Kathy Lien, Managing Director of FX Strategy for BK Asset Management.

These days, all of the action in the forex market seems to be driven by the moves in Asia. On Tuesday night, the Japanese yen soared against all of the major currencies and held onto its strength throughout the London and NY trading sessions. Investors are buying yen because the Bank of Japan may be more inclined to tighten monetary policy than its previous actions suggested. The minutes from the last BoJ meeting was released Tuesday night and according to the report, one member felt that a wider range for the long-term yield would be necessary, which is hawkish and resulted in Wednesday’s yen rally. The question now is whether the views of one policy maker could have a lasting impact on USD/JPY and the answer lies in yields and the yuan. 10-year JGB yields fell Wednesday but the yield curve is steepening, attracting demand back into Japan. If short- or long-term rates continue to rise, the yen should too. But if Japan’s curve flattens, then the yen could resume its slide. Although the yen shrugged off Tuesday night’s yuan weakness, China’s currency and its markets will be important to watch because big moves will have a direct impact on USD/JPY. In the near term, the pair is slowly moving lower but there’s a lot of support between 110.60 and 110.80. We finally get some U.S. data Thursday with producer prices scheduled for release. The stronger dollar and recent decline in oil prices may have eased PPI growth and if that’s true, USD/JPY could test its support levels.

The immediate focus is on the Reserve Bank of New Zealand’s Wednesday night monetary policy announcement. Although the New Zealand dollar rose slightly ahead of the rate decision, in the grander scheme of things, NZD/USD is hovering at 2-year lows and AUD/NZD is near 7-month highs. We believe the RBNZ will keep the door open for future easing. When it last met in June, it left interest rates unchanged, saying it is well positioned to manage a rate change in either direction. RBNZ also tweaked the wording of its statement slightly to suggest that it could change interest rates. The fact that NZD/USD dropped to a 2-year low following the announcement reflects the fear that the next move could be a rate cut. Unfortunately, New Zealand’s economy only worsened since then. Card spending is up but consumer and business confidence declined. Service and manufacturing growth slowed significantly while the trade surplus turned to a deficit. Inflation increased but dairy prices are down. The only saving grace is the weakness of the New Zealand dollar. It helps to make NZD dairy more attractive on the global market and more affordable to Chinese importers who are grappling with yuan weakness. With that in mind, the lack of improvement in dairy prices and China’s troubles give the RBNZ very little reason to be optimistic. Having just tweaked the language in its monetary policy statement at its last meeting, RBNZ still wants the market to believe that a return to easing is possible.

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