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Japan’s stealth yen intervention aims for maximum impact – finance minister

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Japan’s stealth yen intervention aims for maximum impact – finance minister
  • Japan spent report $43 bln in October to prop up yen​
  • Yen transferring in vary under 150 yen to dlr since intervention
  • Suzuki warns about threat of extreme yen weakening
  • BOJ’s Kuroda repeats pledge to maintain ultra-low charges

TOKYO, Nov 1 (Reuters) – Japan’s forex interventions have been stealth operations with a purpose to maximise the results of its forays into the market, Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki mentioned on Tuesday, after the federal government spent a report $43 billion supporting the yen final month.

Financial institution of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda, nevertheless, reiterated the central financial institution’s resolve to maintain rates of interest ultra-low, indicating that the yen’s broad downtrend might proceed.

Japanese officers stay tight-lipped on precisely once they intervened out there in October. Full particulars of their actions won’t be out there till quarterly intervention knowledge is revealed. The July-September knowledge is predicted to be launched early this month.

“There are occasions once we announce intervention proper after we do it and there are occasions once we do not,” Suzuki instructed a information convention on Tuesday. “We’re doing this to maximise results to smoothe sharp forex fluctuations.”

The finance minister repeated his warning that authorities are intently watching market strikes and won’t tolerate “extreme forex strikes pushed by speculative buying and selling”.

Japan spent 6.35 trillion yen ($42.7 billion) on forex intervention in October to prop up the yen, knowledge confirmed on Monday, leaving buyers eager for clues about how a lot additional the authorities would possibly step in to melt the yen’s sharp fall.

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A steep drop within the yen to a 32-year low of 151.94 to the greenback on Oct. 21 possible triggered the intervention, which was adopted by one other spherical on Oct. 24. In September, when Japan performed its first yen-buying intervention since 1998, authorities instantly confirmed that they had stepped in.

For the reason that Oct. 21 intervention, the yen has been transferring in a variety under the psychologically necessary threshold of 150 yen versus the greenback. On Tuesday, the Japanese forex was altering palms at 148.70 per greenback, little modified from the earlier session.

Whereas the opportunity of one other spherical of forex intervention is retaining yen bears at bay for now, buyers are bracing for extra volatility forward of a intently watched U.S. Federal Reserve coverage assembly that ends on Wednesday.

The Fed is broadly anticipated to lift charges by 75 foundation factors for a fourth straight time, whereas debating when to downshift to smaller charge hikes to keep away from sending the economic system right into a tailspin.

In an indication that the onus of addressing sharp yen declines will stay with the federal government fairly than with the central financial institution, the BOJ’s Kuroda dominated out the possibility of elevating Japan’s ultra-low charges anytime quickly.

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“Japan’s economic system remains to be within the midst of recovering from the coronavirus pandemic’s influence. As such, it is necessary to help the economic system with acccomodative financial coverage,” Kuroda instructed parliament on Tuesday.

Kuroda brushed apart criticism, raised by some politicians, that the BOJ’s resolve to keep up an ultra-loose coverage was inconsistent with the federal government’s efforts to curb the yen’s fall.

“Our coverage and that of the federal government complement one another,” Kuroda mentioned. “There isn’t any doubt the BOJ must cooperate intently with the federal government.”

($1 = 148.6100 yen)

Reporting by Tetsushi Kajimoto; Modifying by Kim Coghill, Kenneth Maxwell and Edmund Klamann

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Basel Committee Reports on Digitalisation of Finance

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Basel Committee Reports on Digitalisation of Finance
  • The Basel Committee has published a report on the implications of the digitalisation of finance for banks and supervision.
  • The report considers both the benefits and risks of new technologies and the emergence of new technologically enabled suppliers for the provision of banking services.
  • It identifies eight implications for banks and supervisors relating to macro-structural elements, specific digitalisation themes, and capacity building and coordination.

The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision published a report that considers the implications of the ongoing digitalisation of finance on banks and supervision. The report builds on the Sound Practices: implications of fintech developments for banks and bank supervisors published in 2018, and takes stock of recent developments in the digitalisation of finance.

The report reviews the use of key innovative technologies across various aspects of the banking value chain, including application programming interfaces, artificial intelligence and machine learning, distributed ledger technology and cloud computing. It also considers the role of new technologically enabled suppliers (eg big techs, fintechs and third-party service providers) and business models.

While digitalisation can benefit both banks and their customers, it can also create new vulnerabilities and amplify existing risks. These can include greater strategic and reputational risks, a larger scope of factors that could test banks’ operational risk and resilience, and potential system-wide risks due to increased interconnections. Banks are implementing various strategies and practices to mitigate these risks, but effective governance and risk management processes remain fundamental.

Digitalisation raises regulatory and supervisory implications for both banks and supervisors. These include:

  • monitoring evolving risks and adopting a responsible approach to innovation;
  • safeguarding data and implementing robust risk management processes; and
  • securing the necessary resources, staff and capabilities to assess and mitigate risks from new technologies and business models.

The Committee will continue to monitor developments related to the digitalisation of finance. Where necessary, it will consider whether additional standards or guidance are needed to mitigate risks and vulnerabilities.

Source: BIS

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Treasury Department to Use ‘Automation and Innovation’ to Fight Illicit Finance

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Treasury Department to Use ‘Automation and Innovation’ to Fight Illicit Finance

The Department of the Treasury has outlined the priorities it will pursue this year to step up the fight against illicit finance.

The agency aims to increase transparency, leverage partnerships and support responsible technological innovation, it said in a Thursday (May 16) press release announcing the publication of its “2024 National Strategy for Combating Terrorist and Other Illicit Financing.”

One of the Department’s priorities for the year is closing legal and regulatory gaps in the country’s anti-money laundering and combating the financing of terrorism (AML/CFT) framework, according to the release. It aims to do so by operationalizing the beneficial ownership information registry; finalizing rules covering the residential real estate and investment advisor sectors; and assessing the vulnerability of other sectors.

A second priority is promoting a more effective and risk-focused AML/CFT regulatory and supervisory framework for financial institutions, the release said. The Department will work to do so by providing clear compliance guidance, sharing information and providing resources for supervision and enforcement.

The Department also aims to enhance the operational effectiveness of law enforcement, other U.S. government agencies and international partnerships to combat illicit finance, per the release.

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The fourth priority announced in the press release is realizing “the benefits of responsible technological innovation” by developing new payments technology, supporting the use of new mechanisms for compliance, and using automation and innovation to find new ways to fight illicit finance, the release said.

“In this critical moment for our national and economic security, we need to continue to close the pathways that illicit actors seek to exploit for their schemes,” Brian E. Nelson, Under Secretary of the Treasury for terrorism and financial intelligence, said in the release. “We recognize the threat illicit financial activity represents to our national security, economic prosperity, and our democratic values, and are focused on addressing both the challenges of today and emerging concerns.”

These recommendations are meant to address key risks the Department of the Treasury identified in February in its “2024 National Money Laundering, Terrorist Financing, and Proliferation Financing Risk Assessments.”

In another recent move, the Treasury Department said in April that it wants more tools to curb terror financing.

In testimony released ahead of an April 9 appearance before the Senate Banking Committee, Deputy Secretary Wally Adeyemo said terrorist groups and state actors continually “seek new ways to move their resources in light of the actions we are taking to cut them off from accessing the traditional financial system.”

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The Great Financial Crisis kick started the private credit boom, but SVB was its true 'watershed' moment, Sixth Street co-president says

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The Great Financial Crisis kick started the private credit boom, but SVB was its true 'watershed' moment, Sixth Street co-president says

The Global Financial Crisis threw millions of Americans out of their homes and jobs, upending the entire economy. But for the private credit industry, it was actually an awakening of sorts.

Over the past few decades, U.S. banks’ problems have signaled opportunity for the private credit market, and that’s particularly true of the Global Financial Crisis and the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank last March. When banks have issues, U.S. businesses’ desire for capital rarely wanes dramatically, and that leaves room for alternate lenders.

At the Fortune Future of Finance conference on Thursday, Joshua Easterly, co-CIO and co-president of the global investment firm Sixth Street, explained how he was working at Goldman Sachs after the Global Financial Crisis in 2009, running a team that did public and private market transactions in distressed debt and special situations, when he came to the realization that the lending industry had changed forever.

“It was the intended consequence, not the unintended consequence of regulations after the Crisis,” he said of the private credit boom. “Policymakers…wanted to figure out how to diffuse risk away from the taxpayer, but you couldn’t crush the economy by reducing credit, and so private credit history grew.”

Easterly argued that the private credit industry has a “better model” than the banking industry when it comes to lending risk, because it holds more capital for loans on balance sheets. And that made him come to a startling realization in 2009. “Huh? I think I need to go find a new job,” he recalled saying to a colleague. “So [the move to private credit] was a little bit about necessity.”

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Carey Lathrop, partner and chief operating officer of credit at Apollo Global Management, echoed Easterly’s comments, noting that when he started in the private credit industry “it was clear how hard it was to get things done that made economic sense” in public markets after the GFC.

The rise of private credit since 2008 has been historic, to say the least. Before the crisis, there was under $400 billion in total assets and committed capital in private credit. In 2023, that number jumped to $2.1 trillion, according to the International Monetary Fund. But it wasn’t just the Crisis that spurred the private credit boom. After the collapse of several regional banks in March 2023, headlined by the tech startup focused Silicon Valley Bank, businesses nationwide once again turned to private credit amid a liquidity crunch.

While SVB struggled after rapidly rising interest rates devalued its long-dated bonds, leading to a run on deposits from its list of influential and well-connected clientele, the manner in which private credit operates can lead to more stability in trying times.

Apollo’s Lathrop explained that banks like SVB “had this mismatch with a lot of long-term assets with assets with short term liabilities” that led to unrealized loan losses on their books as rates soared. But private credit doesn’t have this same issue. “We don’t run the [private credit] business that way,” he noted. “We were much more match funded.”

To his point, unlike banks, which fund a majority of their lending through customer deposits (and often uninsured deposits), private credit funds tend to use money from wealthy investors and institutions to make loans, leaving them less exposed to rising interest rates.

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Sixth Street’s Easterly said the SVB drama essentially showed “the robustness” of the private credit] business model, leading a raft of new clientele. “I think it was a watershed moment for the value of the asset class.”

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