After Canadian, Australian Central Banks Moved, When Will Japan Act?

 | Mar 05, 2020 12:56

An interesting weekly report came out of Japan early in Asia today that said that stock investments by foreigners fell by JPY -755B during the week of Feb. 29 vs JPY -68.1B in the prior week. This is the largest withdrawal of funds from Japanese stocks since Sept. 22. In addition, foreign bond investment fell by JPY -489.7B during the week of Feb. 29 vs JPY +656.3B a week earlier. However, the yen is still maintaining its “flight to safety” quality, at least until the Bank of Japan decides to provide further stimulus. Market News International reported that officials signalled Japan doesn’t need additional stimulus until USD/JPY falls sharply through 105.00. The BOJ doesn’t meet again until March 18-19.

The US Federal Reserve (FED) cut rates on Tuesday by 50 bps to 1.25%. After the GPIF was in the market during mid-February selling yen and buying counter currencies, USD/JPY began to tank, and fear of the coronavirus began spreading around the globe. USD/JPY came off from above 112.00 to todays levels near 106.50. There is horizontal support near today's lows, but the bearish outside engulfing candle on the day (so far) isn’t showing much promise for the pair to bounce significantly. The next support is a rising weekly trendline near 105.50 dating back to mid-2016.