Chart Of The Day: Japanese Yen Nearing 24-Year Low; More Weakness Ahead?

 | Jun 13, 2022 10:22AM ET

Friday's US CPI print showed an unexpected YoY jump to 8.6% in May, extending April's 8.3% consumer price inflation rise. The accelerating increase in prices is pushing the Federal Reserve into the corner regarding how to control hotter inflation.

Indeed, it may provoke the already more hawkish US central bank to become even more aggressive about raising interest rates at their next meeting later this week, after policymakers increased the benchmark interest rate in May by half a percentage point, the steepest hike in 22 years.

Other global central banks are also in hiking mode: the European Central Bank will hike rates in July for the first time in 11 years while the Bank of English is on track to increase its interest rates for the fifth time since December, its steepest streak of rate rises in 25 years. Economists expect the UK central bank to keep raising rates in the coming months.

Not only have European central banks been raising borrowing costs. The Bank of Korea raised its benchmark rate for the second time on May 26.

Conversely, however, the Bank of Japan remains anchored to its ultra-loose policy, namely, it is keeping rates at zero. The central bank has even maintained its pledge to keep expanding its balance sheet to support the market if required.

All of this hiking activity has had the effect of boosting the US dollar which today gained, once again, for the fourth day in a row, nearing its highest levels since 2002. Concurrently, the Japanese yen has been tumbling.

The currency is now at a 24-year low on the ever-widening divergence in monetary policy between the US and Japan. Is there additional weakness ahead for the JPY?