Market RecapHIGH
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Market RecapHIGH
Japan spent $74 billion trying to steady the yen after it sank to a 40-year low. Markets think one round of intervention may slow the slide, but it is unlikely to erase the pressure as long as U.S.-Japan rate gaps stay wide.
Japan’s intervention can slow a disorderly slide in the yen, but it does not change the bigger problem: U.S. rates are still much higher than Japan’s. That means the pressure on the yen can fade for a while, but the reason traders favor the dollar has not gone away.
For investors, the split is straightforward. A weaker yen helps Japanese exporters because overseas sales turn into more yen, and it can make Japan-made goods more competitive abroad. At the same time, it makes imported fuel, food, and parts more expensive for domestic businesses, while banks and trading firms can see both more hedging activity and more stress in crowded currency positions.
The next things to watch are whether Japan keeps intervening and whether U.S. rate expectations start to move. If the yen keeps weakening, the carry trade can keep pulling money into higher-yielding assets overseas; if the yen snaps back hard, that same trade can unwind quickly and add another burst of volatility.
A weaker yen lifts the yen value of overseas sales and makes Japan-made goods cheaper abroad. That helps many consumer brands and vehicle makers that earn a big share of their money outside Japan.
Toyota earns a large share of sales overseas, so a weaker yen lifts the yen value of foreign profits and makes Japan-built cars more competitive abroad.