Wednesday, May 13, 2009

coming from Japan’s opposition party — which isn’t exactly steaming ahead towards victory

TO BE NOTED: From Alphaville:

"
Samurai-ed: Japan ‘would avoid dollar bonds’

Japan voiced some anti-dollar/US Treasuries remarks and a future preference for samurai bonds late Tuesday.

From the BBC:
Japan’s opposition party says it would refuse to buy American government bonds denominated in US dollars, if elected.

The chief finance spokesman of the Democratic Party of Japan, Masaharu Nakagawa, told the BBC he was worried about the future value of the dollar. Japan has been a major buyer of US government bonds, helping the US finance its Federal budget deficits.

But, he added, it would continue to buy bonds only if they were denominated in yen - the so-called samurai bonds.

Yen-denominated bonds would effectively mean that the US is exposed to the risk of future falls in the value of the USD rather than Japan. That’s a pretty big policy shift for Nippon, which has been a strong buyer of US Treasuries - and, taken with comments coming out of China, hints at a growing unease in Asia over the USD’s supremacy.

But, as the BBC story notes, this is coming from Japan’s opposition party — which isn’t exactly steaming ahead towards victory. Nakagawa’s comments have also been toned down since his interview with the BBC, and there is, as often happens with Japanese politics, undoubtedly a dose of anti-gaijin political rhetoric in the above. BarCap has a good summary:
Masaharu Nakagawa, the “shadow” finance minister of Japan’s largest opposition party, the Democratic Party of Japan, was quoted by BBC on 12 May saying that his party would shun buying US bonds denominated in dollars if his party took the reins of government as a result of Japan’s upcoming lower house election. In an interview with Bloomberg News on 13 May, however, Mr. Nakagawa clarified that it would merely be one option for Japan to propose that the US government issue samurai bonds (US bonds denominated in yen), and that this was strictly his personal proposal and would not necessarily be implemented immediately by the party if it took the helm. The comments, while perhaps reflecting a genuine concern shared by other world leaders, would also serve to boost Mr. Nakagawa’s nationalist credentials ahead of the election and, we believe, should be viewed primarily in that context. Japan’s lower house election must be held by this September, but could be called earlier if the prime minister decides to dissolve the lower house prior to that time.

The samurai will be waiting for a while, it seems.

Samurai

Related links:
Samurai bond market revives - FT
China to US: We hate you - FT Alphaville
We ‘hate you guys’ even more now… - FT Alphaville

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