Japan fires fresh salvo on yen as economic upswingby Leika Kihara and Tetsushi Kajimoto
TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan said on Friday it will
boost its currency intervention fund and
keep watching dealers' trading positions in yet another effort to tame the yen, in the face of growing evidence that its strength is stalling the economy's post-quake rebound.
August industrial output and other data showed Japan's swift recovery from the March 11 earthquake and tsunami, was tailing off under the weight of the yen's strength and faltering global growth.
Finance Minister Jun Azumi said the government would authorize a further
15 trillion yen ($195 billion) for market interventions, effectively increasing the amount available to a
record 46 trillion yen.
He also said the government will maintain for two more months monitoring of currency traders' daily positions put in place last month to discourage speculative bets on the yen's rise.
Noda, who took over this month as Japan's sixth premier in five years, must oversee the nation's biggest rebuilding effort since the aftermath of World War Two while
reining in public debt twice the size of the $5 trillion economy.The slowdown is coming at a time when the government is debating tax increases to help cover the nearly
17 trillion yen ($221 billion)cost of rebuilding areas ravaged by the March disaster and there are growing concerns that the economy may stall before reconstruction spending kicks in.
Source: Reuters US Online Report Top News
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It's all about "how much you made when you were right" & "how little you lost when you were wrong"