The main driver in FX remains overall investor sentiment, with stock market movements as the primary barometer of risk appetites. When stocks are up and sentiment is positive, the USD, the JPY and gold are typically sold, and when shares start falling, the USD, JPY and gold are all bought. The rally in shares that started this past week was echoed in EUR/USD strength and JPY-cross strength, but sentiment quickly turned on the surfeit of bad news, whether it was weak earnings, dismal data, or dire prognostications
The rationale for the yen’s haven status lies in the carry trade.
For years the low-yielding yen was used as funding for investments in a wide range of higher-yielding assets across the globe. This sent it down to multi-year lows against a number of currencies. But as the financial crisis swept global asset markets, many of those investments were liquidated. The resulting deleveraging pushed the yen sharply higher across the board.
For years the low-yielding yen was used as funding for investments in a wide range of higher-yielding assets across the globe. This sent it down to multi-year lows against a number of currencies. But as the financial crisis swept global asset markets, many of those investments were liquidated. The resulting deleveraging pushed the yen sharply higher across the board.