Yen hits seven-month low after Bank of Japan measures

Japan's yen drops to its lowest point against the US dollar in seven months.

Related Stories

The Japanese yen fell to its lowest level against the US dollar in seven months, a respite for worries over the strong yen hurting exports and the economy.

Part of the reason for the fall is the Bank of Japan's surprise increase of its stimulus measures.

The yen has fallen by 3.7% against the greenback since the 14 February move.

A strong yen has hurt profit outlooks for Japanese manufacturers, with some focussing on overseas production.

Other firms had used to strong yen to go on buying sprees overseas.

The dollar stood at 80.30 yen on Thursday, having risen to 80.406 overnight - its highest since July.

The Bank of Japan (BOJ) expand its asset purchase programme by 10tn yen ($130bn; £83bn) in an effort to boost growth.

Honda factory in Japan A strong yen makes exports such as cars more expensive overseas, and therefore less competitive

The BOJ also left the cost of borrowing unchanged at between zero and 0.1%.

The BBC's Tokyo correspondent Roland Buerk says another factor is the strengthening of the US dollar, after better than expected economic data out the US.

But he says the yen's decline may not alleviate the troubles of Japanese businesses just yet.

"Back in 2007 the yen was at 117 to the dollar not 80 like it is today, so while some depreciation like this is welcome it probably doesn't go far enough for exporters."

Carmakers, such as Toyota, Honda and Mitsubishi, have been some of the worst hit by the strong yen as it makes their products less competitive abroad.

More on This Story

Related Stories

More Business stories

RSS

Features & Analysis

  • The bottoms of Eric Orton's feetFoot loose Watch

    How barefoot Indian tribe inspired a US fitness revolution


  • Anthony Weiner, Medea Benjamin of the group Code Pink, and Amanda BynesTweets of the week

    Hecklers, Anthony Weiner and more - all in 140 characters


  • Eccles cake10 things

    Don't microwave Eccles cakes, and nine other nuggets


  • Mount SharpRed tales

    What we have learnt from Martian probes


Elsewhere on the BBC

  • Five very different people talk to Michelle Fleury (top centre)) about their working lives in Quito, EcaudorWorking Lives Ecuador

    The BBC's Michelle Fleury meets five very different people who live and work in Quito

Programmes

  • XBox OneClick Watch

    How far has Microsoft moved from a purist's game console with the XBox One?

BBC © 2013 The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read more.

This page is best viewed in an up-to-date web browser with style sheets (CSS) enabled. While you will be able to view the content of this page in your current browser, you will not be able to get the full visual experience. Please consider upgrading your browser software or enabling style sheets (CSS) if you are able to do so.