The Deeper Red Of JPY And WTI

 | Jul 03, 2018 01:06AM ET

There are several factors missing from the latest eurodollar rout. Well, not really missing so much as sitting this one out to this point in time. We knew things were really getting serious in 2015 when the Japanese yen joined the currency parade. Only it didn’t fall as others had, JPY rather rose very much against the Bank of Japan.

Over the subsequent years, the pattern has largely filled out in that manner; JPY UP = BAD, as it was. That held true even as late as March this year, where a high in yen against the dollar marked some of the more visible shakeups.

But as EM currencies are behaving like they did two and a half years ago, JPY isn’t. Right now, it is largely trading on the periphery. CNY is taking up all the space for obvious reasons. The yen being in the background to it isn’t by chance, either. I have to believe it is by design.

Not that there are government and central bank officials huddled in Tokyo hammering out the daily trading direction of JPY, cajoling it over time toward “devaluation.” For one, the Bank of Japan is run by clowns. Even if they wanted to intervene directly it would have been far more likely to have had the opposite effect (such as NIRP in January 2016).

No, this is about Japanese banks . They wanted in on the eurodollar business as it moved toward Asia in the immediate aftermath of 2008. You know the old saying, be careful what you wish for.