Figures on Friday from the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, meanwhile, showed that currency speculators are now ‘long’ the Japanese yen for the first time since March 2021.
Since the first week of July when the dollar was at a 38-year high around 162.00 yen, CFTC funds have completely covered one of their biggest short yen positions on record and the Japanese currency has rallied around 10%.
These are seismic moves, but it’s worth remembering what it took to trigger them – another bout of intervention from Tokyo, an interest rate hike and hawkish posture from the Bank of Japan, and a frenzy of safe-haven buying and carry trade unwinds following the global volatility shock earlier this month.
Last week’s wave of ‘risk on’ sentiment that washed over global markets, however, put the brakes on that. Dollar/yen rose 0.7%, not a big move by recent standards, but the biggest rise since June.