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Japan Intervenes To Weaken Yen

Japan Weakens Yen

By MALCOLM FOSTER   10/31/11 07:18 AM ET   AP

TOKYO -- The dollar jumped about 5 percent against the yen Monday after Japan intervened to weaken its currency, whose appreciation has threatened the country's tentative recovery from the tsunami disaster.

The dollar shot above 79 yen in late morning trading in Tokyo after earlier touching a post-World War II low of 75.32 yen – a level that was battering Japan's vital exporters.

Finance Minister Jun Azumi said Japan was compelled to act because of the persistent "one-sided and speculative movement" in the yen's exchange rate, confirming he gave orders to sell yen and buy dollars at 10:25 a.m. local time.

"Whatever the market thinks, I will continue intervening thoroughly until I am satisfied," Azumi said. He declined to say the amount of yen the Japanese government had spent in the action.

The Japanese currency has steadily climbed this year because it has been viewed as a safe haven amid the European debt crisis. Its rise has been another blow to manufacturers as they struggle to recover from the March 11 tsunami, which damaged parts makers in the northern area of Tohoku. Recent floods in Thailand, where many Japanese exporters have set up factories, have also disrupted manufacturing.

In mid afternoon trading in Tokyo, the dollar was trading at 79.41 yen, but it remains to be seen how long an impact the intervention will have. The euro also got a boost, rising to nearly 110.85 yen from 107.15 yen earlier in the day.

Japan last intervened in August, but the effect was short-lived as traders continued to bid up the yen.

The intervention comes ahead of the Group of 20 summit in Cannes, France, on Thursday and Friday.

A strong yen erodes the overseas income of Japan's exporters such as Nintendo Co. and Toyota Motor Corp.

Game maker Nintendo, which gets nearly 80 percent of its sales outside Japan, said last week that exchange rate losses totaled 52.4 billion yen ($689 million) during the half-year through September, and projected a net loss for the full year, partly because of the yen's appreciation.

Yuji Kameoka, director of the investment Information department at Daiwa Securities, predicted the intervention would be effective in keeping the dollar somewhere between 78 and 79 yen "for awhile."

___

Associated Press Writer Noriko Kitano contributed to this report.

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TOKYO -- The dollar jumped about 5 percent against the yen Monday after Japan intervened to weaken its currency, whose appreciation has threatened the country's tentative recovery from the tsunami dis...
TOKYO -- The dollar jumped about 5 percent against the yen Monday after Japan intervened to weaken its currency, whose appreciation has threatened the country's tentative recovery from the tsunami dis...
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04:45 AM on 11/03/2011
Band-aid economics. The Japanese Government does this on a regular basis, it does nothing to solve long term issues. Simply, wasteful...like throwing money into an incinerator.
03:37 PM on 10/31/2011
This is a clear sign that the Monetary Policy of the Federal Reserve is still too tight, enabling the Japanese to dump Yen and buy Dollars to enhance the competitiveness of their exports, while boosting U. S. unemployment. The Federal Reserve needs to take prompt action to initiate further Quantitative Easing to prevent unemployment from returning to double digits.
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jcaunter
Profile: schizoid, INTJ, IQ145
01:20 PM on 10/31/2011
whoah, wait a minute here! I thought "manipulating the currency" was against the rules? So what's everyone jumping on China for?
11:41 AM on 10/31/2011
We're always complaining about Chinese currency manipulation. Why aren't we making the same complaints about Japan?
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jcaunter
Profile: schizoid, INTJ, IQ145
01:21 PM on 10/31/2011
I believe the answer is because Japan is an American military protectorate?
10:27 AM on 10/31/2011
As long as the Japanese government keeps limits on its interventions, the effects of these interventions will be limited. Markets work on expectations, when they expect interventions to be limited, they will ignore them, reducing their effects.

To really get a grip, the government must allow the Bank of Japan to print as many Yen as possible in an unlimited intervention to get the Yen below a certain value. This is what Switzerland did, and it works.