Before I attempt to answer the following question, let’s examine
where the Japanese Yen is today and more importantly, how it got there.
The story begins around the establishment of the second Bretton-Woods
agreement, which de-linked the USD from gold, and ushered in the modern
era of freely floating currencies. In the 30 years that have elapsed
since this period began, the Yen has never been less valuable. In fact,
in trade-weighted terms, the Japanese Yen is at an all-time low!
The decline began in 1995, touched off by a nagging recession and the
accompanying easy monetary policy, in which Japanese real interest
rates were effectively negative. The decline seems to have accelerated
over the past five years, due to the proliferation of the carry trade.
In this type of trade, investors borrow Japanese Yen at a low interest
rate, and sell the Yen for a currency which is supported by higher
interest rates. The profit, known as carry, is the spread between the
two rates. Hedge funds have piled into the carry trade, driving the Yen
to lower and lower depths.
Politicians, relying on economists, have begun to clamor for reform.
For a while, trade representatives and politicians insisted Japan was
intervening on behalf of the Yen, which was ostensibly keeping the Yen
grounded. They have since retreated from this position and embraced the
carry trade theory as being responsible. Regardless of the causes,
everyone agrees that the Yen’s undervaluation is not only destabilizing,
but is economically inefficient. After all, Japan is home to the
world’s largest trade surplus, and its economy is growing at an
annualized rate of almost 5%!
So why doesn’t Japan give in and raise rates? The answer, it turns
out, may not even matter. Traders have speculated that it require a
rise of 200 basis points in Japanese interest rates for the carry trade
to lose its appeal, an event which is extremely unlikely to occur by the
end of 2007. Instead, a little bit of volatility in forex markets
might go a long way in coaxing the currency upward. The Economist has
drawn an analogy of the current situation to 1998, when the Russian
default made hedge funds nervous, and they unwound their carry positions
in the Yen. The result was a rapid 15% appreciation in the Yen.
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