In March, there was a huge depreciation in the yen. Around the same time, interest rates in India were also on an uptrend. This prompted companies in India to raise at least USD 5 billion via the external commercial borrowing, or ECB, route.
Reliance Ports, Reliance Utilities and some other group companies raised USD 1.2 billion in March alone. While ADAG entities like Reliance Energy, Reliance Telecom, and Reliance Communications raised USD 640 million. Bharti raised around USD 3 million, JP Associates around USD 250 million, Rural Electrification Corporation USD 200 million, IRFC USD 125 million, among others.
All these companies had one thing in common they tied up loans when the yen was depreciating, which was to be settled in dollars. Now, the tide is set to turn. Rising interest rates of the yen may push costs of yen-carry-trade, which is a swap cost for borrowing in the yen and converting into the dollars to invest and take advantage of low interest rates on the Japanese currency. The Bank of Japan, or BoJ, may raise interest rates in its August 23 meeting. Could this move hit the yen-carry-trade?
Tohru Sasaki, Chief Forex Strategist, JP Morgan Chase Bank, expects a 25 bps rate hike by BoJ. He feels that the move may not hurt the yen-carry-trade much. “We expect BoJ to hike interest rate on August 23. A 25 bps hike by BoJ will not change the yen-carry-trade as there is still a huge interest rate differential between US and Japan. So, even if BoJ hikes 25 bps this month, I think the yen-carry-trade will continue,” he added.
Speaking on whether the sub-prime mortgage problems in the US are resulting in any unwinding of yen-carry-trades, he said, “In the past few weeks, the risk aversion sentiment was heightened because of the sub-prime mortgage loan problem and the short-term impact has been the buying back of yen short positions. That’s why the yen has been appreciating against major currencies. Although it is still to early to say but it seems that the equity market seems to be stabilized.”