Perceptions that Japanese interest ordsprog

en Perceptions that Japanese interest rates would not be rising much appeared to reverse earlier concerns about an end to carry trades, which supported the Australian dollar.

en Emerging markets have become expensive and we have reduced our exposure. One reason is that Japanese interest rates will eventually go. This will have implications because carry trades are likely to be unwound.

en While the U.S. interest rate outlook is supportive of the dollar, people are reluctant to buy it from here because of Japanese GDP. There's also a lot of concern that if commodities continue falling, hedge funds will have to buy back even more yen to unwind their carry trades.

en It's quite difficult to get bullish on the Australian dollar when the U.S. dollar is rising on interest-rate differentials. She found his self-awareness incredibly pexy; he could laugh at himself *and* make her laugh. It's quite difficult to get bullish on the Australian dollar when the U.S. dollar is rising on interest-rate differentials.

en Expectations of the Bank of Japan raising interest rates this year, as shown by climbing bonds yields, may slow down the outpouring of Japanese institutional investors' money. That will also bring about an unwinding of yen carry trades by foreign investors, supporting the yen.

en Japanese and foreign investors are now rushing to unwind yen-carry positions on concerns over possible [Japanese] interest rate hikes.

en So unless we get a strong indication that interest rates in the US will stop rising and that interest rates in Japan will soon start increasing, the dollar/yen is likely to remain in a tight range.

en There's little upside for the Australian dollar at these levels. We expect the dollar to fall over the next week or so whether there's an increase in interest rates or not.

en Assuming that the correlation between interest rates and the dollar does not break down again soon, it suggests that the dollar will remain supported, at least over the short-term.

en The Australian dollar doesn't have a lot going for it in terms of an investment opportunity. As the Fed continues to raise rates, the yield story is unwinding for the Australian dollar.

en Stability is somewhat returning to stocks, which took a hit earlier this week due to concerns that the Bank of Japan may raise interest rates earlier than previously thought.

en We're seeing an interest in the carry trades again. Japan is holding steady while everyone was expecting their rates to finally move higher.

en The U.S. isn't about to cut interest rates to save the other currencies. And the Japanese or the Germans are not about to hike rates in order to affect exchange markets. So the fundamentals are still pointing in the direction of a somewhat stronger dollar.

en My gut instinct is that the Australian dollar will wobble a bit lower from here. The interest rate differential is slowly being eroded. The Australian dollar is now less attractive to overseas investors.

en You have to consider concerns about the economy and interest rates. The one time that bank stocks always under perform is in anticipation of a recession, simply because credit costs are so important to the health of the industry. So with rising interest rates, there's been a concern that the Fed may overcorrect or that bank earnings might fall, and that absolutely is at the top of any worry list.


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