Toothless G20 Allows Fresh JPY Weakening, But…

 | Feb 18, 2013 05:17AM ET

The G20 failed to produce any political hurdle for further JPY weakening for now, but there are plenty of other potential developments that could move the JPY either way in the coming weeks.

The new G20 statement did admonish members from policies explicitly targeting exchange rates, but the general impression from this meeting was that the statement was a bit of a cop-out and not particularly strong – this much is obvious in the USD/JPY pushing back above 94.00 at times this morning. It appears the G20 members are far more afraid of spooking markets by unleashing hostile rhetoric recognizing the unfolding de facto currency war, rather than the real effects of the war itself for now. This makes some sense, given that currency moves are felt only with a considerable lag. It’s long been clear that the G20 is too unwieldy an organisation to expect any decisive policy initiatives, but I was still expecting more noise from the sidelines, particularly among the EM members of the G20. Instead – it’s very quiet out there at the moment.

So given that rather toothless G20 statement, there is certainly no international political hurdle to prevent the JPY from weakening further, and that is why we’ve seen the renewed selling – though it is still well within recent ranges. But in the bigger picture, at these levels and with so many expectations from the BoJ built into the price, there is plenty of room for movement either way from other developments. Most important is who ends up being appointed as the new BoJ head. On that front, a Muto appointment appears to be gaining steam which is theoretically less JPY bearish than the other candidate names that have been circulated. And then there is the end of the Japanese financial year at the end of March, which could see considerable corporate hedging. In other words, yes, the G20 waved the white flag for now, but the market has other fish to fry.

Euro jumps off support
The Eeuro jumped higher again after testing lower this morning. The euro's strength seems to be the flipside of JPY weakness lately, and that is most likely one of the drivers, as is the unanswered question: will the ECB be able to expand its balance sheet again? But we have plenty to worry about in Europe with questions looming over the Cyprus bail-out/in and the upcoming election in Italy. As long as spreads are quiet and risk is more or less on, the default direction for the Euro seems higher versus the JPY and the USD on the “relative balance sheet size” argument. That being the case, the picture for “risk” world-wide is incredibly varied and doesn’t tell a consistent story. Compare the very elevated US, Japanese and Australian indices, for example, with the recent meltdown in Brazilian and especially Mexican equities, not to mention the weakening in European markets due to the strong Euro. 1.3300 looks like an important line in the sand this week, whether this consolidation turns into a rout.

Chart: USDCAD
USD/CAD upside is looking interesting again after the pair took a stand near the parity level last week and rallied sharply. The 1.0100 area is key resistance and a close above could open up for 1.0400+.