Member LoginMember Login - User registration - Setup as front page - Add to favorites - Sitemap Japan's yen falls to its weakest since 1990 against the dollar !

Japan's yen falls to its weakest since 1990 against the dollar

Time:2024-04-30 21:08:56 source:Culture Channels news portal

NEW YORK (AP) — Some of the world’s wildest action in financial markets is roiling around the Japanese yen.

The value of Japan’s currency has tumbled so much that for a moment on Monday it took 160 yen to equal $1. A few years ago, it took closer to 100 yen to make a U.S. dollar. The yen has been so weak that it’s back to where it was in 1990, shortly after Japan’s famous “bubble economy” burst.

After it briefly touched the 160 yen level in overnight hours for traders in New York, the value of a dollar quickly shifted back to 156 yen by midday Monday on the East Coast. Such sudden moves can happen in the foreign-exchange market, which can be notoriously volatile. Trading may also have been jumpy because of a holiday in Japan that kept its stock market closed. But the speed and degree of the yen’s swings raised speculation about whether Japanese officials were making moves to prop up the value of their currency.

Related information
  • King and Queen jet back to London for public
  • Shed of the Year 2024: We speak to one entrant who created his dream British boozer 'The Dirty Dog'
  • Will the Budget cut taxes
  • With table service and spacious seats, why going by train with LNER is the ultimate way to travel
  • Caitlyn Jenner confronts anti
  • United Airlines flight is forced to DIVERT after a dog POOPED in first class aisle
  • NASA is looking for new astronauts
  • 'Forget the Algarve!' Travel experts reveal breathtaking lesser
Recommended content
  • Angels score two on wild pitch and throwing error, beat Phillies 6
  • New Cybertruck owners are re
  • I've been hit with 40 driving penalties in London
  • Best bank accounts: Top current accounts for interest and rewards
  • Chinese defense minister holds video call with US counterpart
  • Inside the Cambodian hotel with rooms fit for top