Key Takeaways
-USD/JPY traded at 158.51, down 0.18, or 0.14%, with a session high of 159.097.
-The yen remains near 160, the level that triggered Tokyo interventions in late April and early May.
-Markets price more than a 50% chance of a Fed rate hike in December, while BOJ’s June 15–16 meeting is closely watched.
-Japan’s Q1 GDP grew 2.1% annualized, above expectations, supporting potential BOJ tightening.
-Persistent high oil prices from the Middle East conflict continue to pressure the yen and strengthen the dollar.
The Japanese yen remained near 159 per dollar as USD/JPY approached the critical 160 level, which had triggered prior market interventions. Traders are assessing how much weakness Tokyo will tolerate before re-entering the market.
Meanwhile, the US dollar stays strong due to persistent inflation fears and elevated Treasury yields, pushing the currency toward a six-week high. The widening US-Japan rate gap continues to favour the dollar, keeping pressure on the yen.
Fed Rate Bets and BOJ Policy
The US dollar is buoyed by inflation concerns linked to the Iran conflict and elevated oil prices, which strengthen expectations of a Fed rate hike in December. Markets are pricing over a 50% chance of a hike, while the Bank of Japan’s June meeting has returned to focus after strong Q1 GDP data showed 2.1% annualized growth. A potential BOJ hike could provide floor support for the yen, though intervention risk remains a key consideration for traders near 160.
Oil Adds Pressure
High oil prices continue to weigh on Japan, as the country relies heavily on imported energy. Rising fuel costs add to the inflation mix and increase import costs, straining household budgets. This energy pressure compounds USD/JPY upside, reinforcing the rate gap advantage for the US dollar.
Technical Analysis
USD/JPY is trading around 158.85, stabilising after a sharp intervention-style selloff earlier in May. The pair has rebounded steadily from lows near 156.00, but momentum is slowing beneath resistance at 159.00–160.70.
What Traders Should Watch Next
-Fed rate expectations: Ongoing US inflation and Treasury yields can drive further dollar strength.
-BOJ June meeting: Guidance or action could defend the yen floor or boost intervention sentiment.
-Intervention risk: The 160 handle remains critical; Tokyo may step in again if USD/JPY moves disorderly.
-Oil prices: Persistently high energy costs maintain pressure on Japan’s trade and yen value.
Read more about USD/JPY, Fed and BOJ policy, and energy-driven currency risks in this article below.