The Japanese Yen's Weakness and Japan's Debt Trap:
The Japanese Yen is nearing its 2024 lows against the US dollar and is even weaker on a trade-weighted basis, since today's dollar itself is much softer than back then. Markets expect official intervention from Japan's Ministry of Finance to halt the slide, but it won't work just like past efforts. The real issue is Japan's interest rates are artificially low and don't compensate investors for rising default risks, fueling yen depreciation. Higher rates could stabilize the currency but might trigger a fiscal crisis. Japan is stuck.
Why Bond Yields Are Too Low:
A key chart shows Japan's problem: it compares government debt levels to 30-year bond yields. Japan's yields risen fast but remain too low compared to its massive debt. Germany has far less debt, yet its 30-year yield is slightly higher. The Bank of Japan keeps buying bonds to suppress yields, preventing them from reaching market-desired levels. As long as yields stay artificially low, yen pressure will continue no matter what intervention happens.
The Solution: Sell Assets to Cut Debt;
Letting yields rise fully risks fiscal disaster, since Japan can't afford the Bank of Japan to stop bond buying entirely. But there's a way out: Japan's net debt is only 130% of GDP (vs. gross debt at 240%), thanks to valuable government assets. Selling some of these especially liquid ones and using proceeds to shrink gross debt would help. Even small steps would boost confidence in the yen. This beats ineffective FX intervention.
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Shanu
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