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【Japanese Yen Fixed Deposit】Citibank expects Japan to raise interest rates only in July; Japanese Yen fixed deposit interest rates up to 0.8%
Next Thursday (March 19) is “Super Thursday,” when the Federal Reserve announces its interest rate decision. On the same day, Europe, the UK, Switzerland, and Japan will also hold monetary policy meetings. Despite facing the “black swan” event of the Middle East crisis, major American banks maintain their forecast that Japan will only raise interest rates in the second half of the year, and that the Japanese stock market will challenge the record high of 63,000 points by year-end.
Click the image 👇👇👇👇 to see the comparison of Japanese yen fixed deposit rates
Citi’s investment strategy and asset allocation chief, Liao Jiahao, indicates that Japan is unlikely to raise interest rates this time, and is expected to do so only in July by 25 basis points. Citi analysts anticipate that when the USD/JPY approaches 160, the Japanese government will intervene in the market to buy yen, and they believe that in the short term, USD/JPY will stay within the 155-160 range; by the end of the year, USD/JPY could fall below 145.
Click here 👇👇👇👇 to see the comparison of Japanese yen fixed deposit rates
HSBC and Citi both expect Japan to raise interest rates only in July, while Goldman Sachs and other Wall Street firms predict the yen could reach 160, prompting central bank intervention to defend the currency. Market rumors suggest that before Japan’s general election, the New York Fed may have conducted a “rate inquiry” when the yen hit about 159, indicating U.S. support for Japan to defend the yen.
Expert Yen Forecasts:
Hang Seng short-term deposit at 8% high interest matures at the end of this month
Japan raised interest rates by 0.25% at the end of last year, with the current policy rate at 0.75%. HSBC and Citi both expect rates to remain unchanged until the second half of the year. Fortunately, China Minsheng Bank has preemptively increased yen fixed deposit rates against the trend, with a slight rise of 0.05%, now at 0.16% for six months and one year, making it the “long-term king.”
Although yen fixed deposit rates are not high, traditional and digital banks are entering the market. ZhongAn (ZA Bank) offers a 1-month annual interest rate of 0.001%, and WeLab Bank offers 0.01% for the same term, replacing the previous dominance of Standard Chartered Hong Kong (02888), ICBC Asia, CCB Asia, HSBC International, Nanyang Commercial Bank, and others. Note that the city’s top 7-day annual interest rate of 8% at Hang Seng will expire at the end of March.
High interest rates reportedly pressure the Bank of Japan to refuse further rate hikes
Additionally, the main reasons for the continued weakness of the yen are summarized as four:
US reportedly inquiring about yen exchange rate in January, preparing joint intervention
Additionally, rumors suggest that the New York Fed conducted a “rate inquiry” on January 26 after the BOJ’s rate decision, when the yen hit about 159, to support the yen.
The Nikkei reports that U.S. officials indicated that the U.S. government actively engaged in “rate inquiries” to support the yen and is prepared to jointly intervene if Japan requests.
Sources say that the rate inquiry, led by the New York Fed on behalf of the U.S. Treasury Secretary Bessent, was conducted without a formal request from Japan’s Ministry of Finance, due to concerns over political uncertainty before Japan’s elections, which could cause market turmoil and affect global financial markets.
The U.S. intervention in the forex market, as a preliminary step to buying yen, reflects the willingness to use economic power to stabilize allied countries. If Tokyo requests, the U.S. may consider intervening to support the yen.