Why hasn't the Japanese Yen been bought amid the tense situation in the Middle East?

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As tensions in the Middle East escalate, the yen is depreciating further. Concerns over rising crude oil prices leading to a widening trade deficit in Japan have caused the once common phenomenon of “buying yen during crises” to disappear. Market focus has shifted to the “2022-style yen depreciation” triggered by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Increasingly, opinions suggest that buying dollars and rising energy prices during extraordinary times will accelerate the selling of the yen.

“With the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz causing oil prices to rise, there is no active atmosphere for buying yen,” explained a foreign exchange broker at a domestic Japanese bank about the market sentiment after the beginning of this week.

On March 3, in the London foreign exchange market, the yen weakened to around 157.90 yen per dollar, the lowest level since February 9. It closed last weekend near 156 yen. The yen also depreciated against the Swiss franc to about 203 yen per Swiss franc on the 2nd, the lowest since 1990, and fell to a new low against the Australian dollar on the 3rd.

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Japan Economic News and the Financial Times merged in November 2015 to form the same media group. The alliance, formed by two newspapers founded in the 19th century in Japan and the UK, promotes collaboration across a wide range of fields under the banner of “high-quality, most powerful economic journalism.” As part of this effort, articles are exchanged between the two newspapers’ Chinese websites.

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