Goldman Sachs raised its USD/JPY exchange rate forecasts on the 5th (local time) according to CNBC, projecting 162 yen in three months, 163 yen in six months, and 165 yen in twelve months—up from previous estimates of 160, 158, and 155 yen respectively. The investment bank cited persistent high US Treasury yields, low recession risk, ongoing fiscal concerns, and the Bank of Japan's gradual interest rate increases as drivers of continued yen weakness pressure. Goldman Sachs noted that yen depreciation trends are likely to persist given the current macroeconomic environment and central bank policy trajectories.
Goldman Sachs adjusted its three-month USD/JPY forecast to 162 yen, its six-month forecast to 163 yen, and its twelve-month forecast to 165 yen. The bank's previous forecasts stood at 160 yen, 158 yen, and 155 yen for the same time horizons. Goldman Sachs stated that yen weakness pressure is likely to continue when considering prolonged high US Treasury yields, low recession risk, persistent fiscal concerns, and the Bank of Japan's gradual rate hikes.
Goldman Sachs analyzed that past Japanese authorities' foreign exchange market interventions only temporarily halted yen weakness, with USD/JPY subsequently resuming its upward trajectory. The bank assessed that similar patterns would emerge if authorities intervene again this time. Goldman Sachs added that there is no reason for the USD/JPY uptrend to stop unless an unexpected US economic growth shock occurs or the Bank of Japan shifts to an aggressive tightening policy stance.
The investment bank noted that the US dollar's strength against low-interest-rate currencies will persist longer as surging artificial intelligence investment in the United States and energy supply disruptions continue.
Goldman Sachs maintained an optimistic outlook on certain high-interest-rate emerging market currencies. The bank raised its forecast for the Indian rupee based on the Reserve Bank of India's improved growth trajectory, low inflation rates, and expectations of capital inflows. Goldman Sachs also increased its forecast for the Colombian peso based on the Central Bank of Colombia's hawkish monetary policy stance and expectations of fiscal consolidation.
Reflecting these differences, Goldman Sachs stated it will continue to favor using the yen as a funding source for investments in high-carry-yield emerging markets. The bank anticipates investors will continue the strategy of borrowing the low-interest-rate yen to invest in higher-yielding emerging market assets.
What are Goldman Sachs' updated USD/JPY forecasts?
Goldman Sachs projects USD/JPY at 162 yen in three months, 163 yen in six months, and 165 yen in twelve months, up from previous forecasts of 160, 158, and 155 yen respectively.
Why does Goldman Sachs expect continued yen weakness?
Goldman Sachs cites persistent high US Treasury yields, low recession risk, ongoing fiscal concerns, and the Bank of Japan's gradual interest rate increases as factors driving continued yen depreciation pressure.
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