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The Economic Times
The Economic Times

Warsh Fed era heralds a new trial for Asian currencies

Kevin Warsh’s early days at the helm of the Federal Reserve are a tough reminder that when it comes to currencies, the US central bank isn’t always going to act with the best interests of international markets.

Warsh is signaling he will be firmly focused on controlling inflation. The Fed chief was far more hawkish than anticipated in presiding over his first policy meeting, and officials are leaning toward an interest-rate hike this year. That was a surprise because Warsh had presented himself, prior to taking office last month, as sympathetic to US President Donald Trump’s wish for easier money. The dollar surged in response and looks set for a period of relative strength. That is precisely what beleaguered Asian currencies don’t need.

Asia needs a healthy US economy, with prices contained and spending robust, given its dependence on exports. The region just doesn’t want that to come at its expense. Key nations have spent substantial sums intervening in the market and pushed borrowing costs higher. They would have loved a break from the Fed.

This is particularly true for Japan, which has been grappling with a sliding currency despite five rate hikes beginning in 2024. Had Warsh been more muted, that would have counted as a short-term win for the yen, which is hovering near its weakest level since 1986. Tokyo has waded into markets on numerous occasions in the past few years, most recently to prevent the currency retreating much beyond 160 per dollar.

Traders were on alert Friday for additional efforts to prop up the yen. It was recently trading at around 161, a touch weaker than its levels of late April that prompted the last round of support. Japan spent an unprecedented $74 billion in the month to May 27 to back the yen. Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s government can either throw more money at defending that kind of range or let the currency retreat a bit more before stepping in. Given the momentum behind the dollar this week, Takaichi might not get the same kind of traction as she did six weeks ago.

Japan may do better to hang back a little and wait for dollar bulls to become overstretched. Intervention is as much about timing as intent. Officials are often looking to change the psychology of the market. Given the surprising message from Warsh, that might take a while. Bets on further rate hikes from the Bank of Japan won’t move the needle much.

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