Eisuke Sakakibara, a former Japanese finance official, stated that with the Japanese yen finding some support, and as the Federal Reserve's interest rate hikes come to an end and U.S. interest rates are poised to peak, the pressure on the yen to depreciate eases. It is unlikely that Japanese authorities will intervene in the foreign exchange market to boost the yen's exchange rate.
In the 1990s, while serving as Vice Minister of Finance, Sakakibara orchestrated multiple monetary interventions, earning him the nickname "Mr. Yen." His forward-looking statements on policies of the Japanese authorities and the Bank of Japan, along with his insights into the yen's prospects, continue to make him a focal point of close attention in the foreign exchange market.
Sakakibara indicated that with the Federal Reserve ending its aggressive monetary tightening and the outlook for the Japanese economy improving, the yen is expected to rise to 130 yen per dollar by the end of the year. The Japanese Ministry of Finance and the Bank of Japan are very satisfied with the current inflation rebound and the improved economic outlook, and they anticipate no interventions from the Japanese authorities to warn or interfere with the trend of the yen exchange rate.
Since March 2022, the Federal Reserve's swift interest rate hikes to combat soaring inflation, coupled with the Bank of Japan's adherence to a loose monetary policy, have led to a roughly 14% depreciation of the yen exchange rate. However, data-driven decisions by the Federal Reserve at future meetings will be key to the yen's exchange rate. If the Federal Reserve acts in line with market expectations, the yen is expected to modestly rise to 130 by the end of this year and gradually ascend to 120 in the coming years.
Although Kazuo Ueda, Governor of the Bank of Japan, has stated that the Bank will temporarily maintain its ultra-loose monetary policy, signs of easing inflation and a cooling labor market after the Federal Reserve's July monetary policy meeting indicate that the U.S. economy is losing momentum. Most market participants expect the Federal Reserve's rate hike cycle is nearing its end, which will also lend support to the yen's exchange rate.
In October last year, following a rapid decline in the yen against the dollar and a significant rise in financial market expectations that the yen might depreciate further, the Japanese Ministry of Finance intervened in the foreign exchange market.
Currently, although the possibility of the yen depreciating further against the dollar cannot be completely ruled out, Sakakibara believes that with the easing of inflation in the U.S., a cooling labor market, and significant improvements in Japan's inflation and economic outlook compared to the past two to three decades, the trend of further depreciation of the yen has changed, significantly reducing the pressure and need for Japanese authorities to intervene in the foreign exchange market.