Yen Bull Eyes ¥105

 | Apr 06, 2016 06:47AM ET

Wednesday April 6: Five things the markets are talking about

Yesterday, global equities came under renewed pressure with investors having a plethora of reasons why to choose from, ranging from an overbought stock market, suspect earnings reports, weakening oil prices, U.S. treasury department stunning the Street with new inversion rules, weaker German factory orders, a strengthening yen and an IMF Chief insisting that more government action is required to combat global “sluggishness.”

Nevertheless, today the market will want to be taking its cue from the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) minutes. The fixed income market will be hoping to get a better idea on the timing of the next Fed rate hike. While the rest of us want a clearer understanding of what prompted the Fed to reduce the number of forecasted “dot plot” rate hikes this year from 4 to 2 in a matter of months.

1. Japanese officials clash over state of economy

With a matter weeks to go to the expected decision on second round of consumption tax hike, Japan’s government continue to debate just how bad domestic current conditions are to justify postponing the increase.

Last week PM Abe indicated that his government would raise the tax rate “unless there is a Lehman-type event.” Overnight, opposition speakers suggest that current consumption is at its “worst level since the Lehman crisis.”

The rest of the market continues to focus on the strength of the yen (outright, trading atop its November 2014 highs ¥110.34) and wondering how aggressive the BoJ is expected to be?

The market has been record short yen futures’ and the latest dollar move has many speculating some form of intervention by the Government or BoJ. Technical analysts have eyed ¥110 as that breaking point.

However, according to Mr. “Yen,” former Minister of Finance Eisuke Sakakibara (was in charge of currency intervention), he remains more bullish on his own currency, seeing it rallying to ¥105 in H2 as the outlook for the world economy worsens. He said that “a climb to ¥105 only then is likely to prompt Japanese officials to intervene verbally to try and talk it down, while gains past ¥100 could see physical intervention to weaken it.”