"Yen-Carry" Anniversary Nears, but Worries Fade

Markets have muscle memory, so summer's approach might trigger unpleasant reminders of last year's post-July 4 Wall Street fireworks. The "yen-carry" crisis, as it became known, happened when the Bank of Japan (BoJ) raised interest rates more than expected last July 31, which, combined with other factors, caused a spike in the Japanese yen and a dramatic sell-off in the U.S. tech sector.

Muscle memory can linger, but in this case, it's likely to be unwarranted. Japanese yields are up, but a similar Japan-related dive in U.S. stocks is unlikely this summer. A record investor-long position in the yen is one of many reasons—the yen is up about 11% versus the U.S. dollar since last July's lows.

"The Japanese bond market could create volatility as higher yields attract domestic investors to repatriate money back to Japan and the BoJ reduces its balance sheet," said Michelle Gibley, director of international research at the Schwab Center for Financial Research. "However, we don't expect a repeat of the global market volatility seen last August because the shifts could be more gradual rather than all of a sudden."

Investors have embraced the yen partly because the BoJ raised its benchmark interest rate from below zero early last year to the current 0.5%—the highest since 2008—amid elevated inflation. Economists expect further rate hikes to come, with possible clarity on timing at the next BoJ meeting June 16–17. A more hawkish central bank generally strengthens a country's currency.

Another source of yen strength is uncertainty around U.S. tariff policy, which has hurt U.S. assets like the dollar and helped non-U.S. assets.

A year ago, things were very different. The July 31 BoJ rate hike occurred when a record number of speculator contracts were positioned to short the yen. The yen's sudden strength—which also reflected a weak U.S. jobs report and hawkish guidance by the BoJ—threatened to capsize the "yen carry trade," a move where investors borrow cheap yen to buy U.S. assets, particularly info tech stocks.