USD/JPY as it happened:

Other:

USD/JPY was sitting around 157.50 after the market close in the US on Wednesday afternoon before intervention selling hit it, hard. From 157.50 it fell big figure after big figure in super-illiquid trade over the course of about 20 minutes before finally bouncing from 153.00. In the posts above you’ll find an explanation of why that time of day is so thinly traded (if you need an explanation). The Bank of Japan took full advantage by driving the yen higher. The flip side of this action is that the Bank appears to be unwilling to take on the forex market at liquid times. You’ll recall the first bout of intervention we had was on Monday, a Japanese market holiday and also therefore thinner liquidity than normal.

So, down to 153.00 before a bounce, a very rapid one back to 154 and then a little slower to 155. Over the course of the session the rebound extended to above 156 and its just under there as I post (nope, its popped back above 156.00, see chart below).

As a heads up, Friday and Monday are Japanese holidays, markets are closed. This’ll heighten concerns there could be more to come from the BoJ.

Oh, I am writing about intervention but I should note that Masato Kanda, vice-minister for international affairs at Japan's Ministry of Finance, and the official who will instruct the BOJ to intervene, when he judges it necessary, would not comment to confirm or deny that intervention had taken place. Personally, I don’t think he’s fooling anyone.

Elsewhere it was relatively subdued as traders digested the less dovish FOMC and Powell. Major FX, yen excepted, is barely changed on the session here.

For Australia we had data showing a smaller than expected trade surplus in April, and that dwelling approvals have fallen to their lowest level since April 2012. Also from Australia a state premier (the state has around 20% or so of Australia’s population) is giving away AUD1,000 to each household (this’ll total around AUD 2.5bn) in the state to cover electricity bills. Such fiscal stimulus is another reason for the RBA to not be too keen to cut rates soon.

USD/JPY:

usdyen intervention then bounce 02 May 2024 wrap