Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/14/2012 12:38 -0400
Seemingly hidden from the mainstream media's attention, we note that the last six weeks has seen the second largest devaluation in the JPY since Sakakibara's days in the mid-90s. As Sean Corrigan (of Diapason Commodities) notes, this has to be putting pressure on Japan's Asian neighbors - not least the engine of the world China. Furthermore, JPY on a trade-weighted basis has cracked through all the major moving averages and sits critically at its post-crisis up-trendline. As we noted last night, perhaps Japan really is toppling over the Keynesian endpoint event horizon. JPY weakness and the carry trade may not be quite as hand in hand if rates start to reflect any behavioral biases, inflation (or more critically hyperinflation) concerns any time soon.
The six-week devaluation in JPY (spike up) is the second largest since the mid 1990s...
And JPY on a trade-weighted basis is at a critically important trendline...
Charts: Bloomberg
The six-week devaluation in JPY (spike up) is the second largest since the mid 1990s...
And JPY on a trade-weighted basis is at a critically important trendline...
Charts: Bloomberg
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