Carry trades are up sharply today which makes it quite timely for us to release our fourth quarter Fundamental and Technical outlook for USDJPY. The Bank of Japan left interest rates unchanged but the US dollar is battling with the prospect of lower interest rates. Although the Yen could weaken further against the high yielding currencies like the Australian and New Zealand dollars, both technicals and fundamentals suggest that we are nearing a top and reversal of significant proportion.
Throughout 2007 the BOJ has been very slow in tightening monetary policy, preferring a highly gradualist approach that saw the central bank raise rates only twice to 50bp since abandoning the Zero Interest Rate Policy in July of 2006. The reason behind the BOJ’s cautious stance has been the fear by monetary authorities that a too rapid rise in short term rates would stifle the budding recovery of the Japanese economy, possibly sending the country back into deflation. Nevertheless, the policymakers are acutely aware of the negative impact of unnaturally low interest rates as the country’s currency experienced multi-decade lows against many of its G-10 counterparts in Q3 of 2007. Given a chance, the BOJ would like to begin the normalization process in earnest, steadily raising rates throughout 2008. As we stated earlier, wage growth will be the key to allowing Mr. Fukui and company to pursue a more aggressive monetary policy. However, the capital markets may be already anticipating this course of events. Note in the following chart the 3 month LIBOR rate remains well above the BOJ target rate of 0.50%. In the past LIBOR rates have been a good predictor of BOJ target rates by several months. If the traders at the short end of the Japanese yield curve are correct, the BOJ may hike rates before the year end. While an additional 25bp rate hike would not have a significant impact on the absolute interest rate differentials between the yen and the high yielders, it may be a signal that this time the tightening policy will be much more sustained than in the past.
Technical Outlook: Nearing a Top and Reversal of Significant Proportion
USDJPY may have completed a 12 year correction in the form of a triangle at 124.13. Triangles unfold in 5 waves (A-B-C-D-E) and the structure below is clearly in 5 waves. There is risk of wave E extending higher towards the next major resistance level of 128.00 but the weight of evidence suggests that wave is complete at 124.13. For one, wave E is close to 61.8% of wave C. Alternating legs of triangles are often related by 61.8% or a derivation of Φ (Phi….618). Wave E would be exactly 61.8% of wave C at 122.57. The top was at 124.13. A difference of just 155 pips when projecting a move that is nearly 3000 pips works out to just over a 5% error. The time relationships between the different legs of the triangles also favor the idea that wave E is complete at 124.13. The weeks that each leg of the triangle took to unfold (from A to E) were 41, 16, 27, 37, 30. The average length of time for each leg is 30.2 weeks. Wave E took 30 weeks. The 'look' is right for a top and reversal of significant proportion. The pair should be on its way towards the base of the triangle at 101.26. 124.13 is critical to the bearish bias.