只能希望日本政府干预汇率了. http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/ne ... ZJPsOAXuU&pos=4
Japanese Finance Minister Hirohisa Fujii said the government is watching currencies “very closely” after the yen advanced to a 14-year high against the dollar, threatening the country’s export-led recovery.
Fujii spoke to reporters in Tokyo today after investors shrugged off remarks he made less than an hour earlier that Japan needs to “take appropriate action against abnormal movements” in foreign-exchange markets.
The comments suggest Japan is closer to stepping into currency markets for the first time in more than five years as the rising yen erodes exporters’ profits in the wake of the country’s worst postwar recession. The currency’s more than 8 percent advance over the past three months has also added to Japan’s deflationary pressure by driving import costs lower.
“The possibility of intervention has apparently increased,” said Masafumi Yamamoto, Tokyo-based chief foreign- exchange strategist at Barclays Bank Plc. “Stocks have been falling and the government declared Japan is in a deflationary state. In this environment, there’s no reason for it to tolerate a higher yen.”