By Leika Kihara
WASHINGTON, April 18 (Reuters) – The yen may come under further pressure if markets see the Bank of Japan as being too slow in addressing inflationary risks, Asian Development Bank โPresident Masato Kanda said.
Investors buy dollars in times of global stress in part because the U.S. โis an oil exporter, but even when such positions are unwound the yen fails to rise much against the dollar, Kanda, who โwas formerly Japan’s top currency diplomat, told reporters late Friday.
“The biggest reason is interest rate differentials (between the U.S. and Japan). With markets particularly focusing on what the U.S. Federal Reserve could do, Japan’s currency will be left behind if many people think the BOJ will be behind the curve” in addressing inflationary risks, he said.
Investors may also sell โyen if they worry about Japan’s โ fiscal sustainability, Kanda said during his visit to Washington to attend this week’s meetings of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank Group.
An advocate of expansionary fiscal policy, Prime โ Minister Sanae Takaichi has rolled out subsidies to cap gasoline prices and pledged to keep boosting spending to support the economy.
Critics say such moves would add to Japan’s huge public debt, which is already twice the size of its โeconomy and โthe largest debt-to-gross-domestic-product ratio among major countries.
While Japan is โnot the only country using subsidies to curb โfuel bills, such measures should be targeted and temporary to avoid distorting market pricing, Kanda said.
“Price fluctuations are instruments that help society adapt to new norms. In general, it’s inappropriate to switch them off and hamper changes in public behavior,” he said.
Instead of blanket subsidies, countries should spend more on investment to boost energy efficiency, increase oil reserves and take steps to diversify energy consumption, Kanda said.
The dollar dropped to its lowest in โseven weeks on Friday after Iran said the Strait of Hormuz โwas open, raising hopes the Middle East conflict is nearing an โend.
The dollar also weakened against the yen, โthough with prospects fading for an interest rate hike in April the Japanese currency remained โnear the 160-per-dollar mark that has sparked โpast currency interventions. The dollar โstood around 158.61 yen on Friday.
Wary of hurting a fragile economy, the BOJ has kept rates low even as rising import costs from a weak yen and steady wage gains have kept inflation around โits target for nearly four years.
Kanda, โwho presided as Japan’s top currency diplomat for three years until July 2024, combated the โyen’s relentless falls with record foreign exchange intervention – a move that earned him the nickname “Mr. Yen.”
(Reporting โby Leika Kihara;Editing by Dan Burns and Chizu Nomiyama )