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Political Risk Seeps Into Yen Trade With Abe Battling an Upstart

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It’s been five years since politics captured much attention from the foreign-exchange world in Japan, but market players are now gaming out potential scenarios for the yen from the Oct. 22 general election.
It’s been five years since politics captured much attention from the foreign-exchange world in Japan, but market players are now gaming out potential scenarios for the yen from the Oct. 22 general election.
The consensus view is still for Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s coalition to sail to a comfortable third-straight majority in the lower house, ensuring years more to come for Abenomics and the weak yen it’s produced. Even so, the situation is more fluid than anticipated just months ago, with the sudden rise of new political parties that — with a plurality of voters undecided — could yet deal Abe a setback that calls into question his tenure as head of his party.
The new Party of Hope, led by Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike, hasn’t laid out details on where it stands on monetary policy — saying it favors keeping unprecedented easing for now, though it doesn’t want to rely too much on monetary easing and wants to work with the Bank of Japan on a smooth exit strategy. Many in the currency-strategy world assume that if her group gains major ground, it would strengthen the yen and hit Japanese equities.

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