Japan to Lend $100 Bil. to Weaken Yen
By wchung | 24 Mar, 2026
In an effort to weaken the strongest yen since World War II, Japan will lend $100 billion in dollar-denominated funds to businesses to help them acquire foreign companies, natural resources and energy source, under a package released Wednesday by Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda.
The emergency facility with a total credit line of $100 billion (7.6 trillion yen) will be created within the government’s foreign exchange fund special account. Low-interest, one-year loans will be extended to private companies through the Japan Bank for International Cooperation and private-run banks in Japan.
Even without the new loan package multi-national corporations are motivated to use the strong yen to invest overseas in business acquisition and to expand production facilities. The government hopes to boost this trend in hopes of weakening the yen. Companies expanding overseas are forced to sell yen and buy foreign currencies, helping to weaken the yen.
The yen was trading at 76.64-65 to the dollar at 1 p.m. on Aug. 24, the same level as 5 p.m. Tuesday.
The government will also call on major financial institutions to report on their foreign currency reserves to the Finance Ministry by September.
Articles
- Pakistan Offers to Host Actual Peace Talks—IRL
- Mandopop Legend Jay Chou to Release First Album in 4 Years
- Japan's Cherry Blossom Picnics Pinched by 25% Food Inflation Since 2020
- SK Hynix Places Record $8 Billion Order for ASML EUV Lithography Tools
- TSMC Capacity a Major Bottleneck for AI Buildout Says Broadcom
- BTS Army to Bring $5.3 Billion Spending Power to a City Near You
- Zoox to Expand Robotaxi Service into San Francisco and Las Vegas
- NYSE Partners with Securitize to Develop Tokenized Securities Platform
- World's 25 Most Polluted Cities All in India, Pakistan and China
- Flight Cancellations Spread Across Globe on Mideast Hub Closures
