Key Takeaways
-The Japanese yen weakened to around 158.5 per dollar, on track for a weekly loss above 1%.
-Broad US dollar strength and hot US inflation data are supporting higher Fed rate-hike expectations.
-Markets now price a roughly 44% chance of a Fed hike in December, up from 22.5% a week ago.
-High oil prices and Japan’s imported energy costs add further pressure on the yen.
-Tokyo’s intervention risk returns near 158–160, while BoJ signals suggest rate hikes may be considered.
-USD/JPY technical levels show support near 157.5–156.4 and resistance at 158.8–160.7.
USD/JPY gains reflect robust US inflation data, rising energy costs linked to the Iran war, and strong economic activity that keeps Fed tightening expectations elevated. Hot US producer and consumer price reports have pushed markets toward a higher-for-longer policy outlook, which strengthens the dollar against the yen.
Oil and Japan-Specific Pressures
Japan relies heavily on imported energy, so high oil prices weigh on the yen. Rising wholesale inflation, especially in petroleum and chemical-linked goods, exacerbates domestic cost pressures and supports a weaker currency. The combination of imported inflation and widening US-Japan rate differentials drives USD/JPY higher.
Intervention and BoJ Signals
Tokyo has intervened several times to slow yen weakness, with support from the US Treasury, but intervention alone may not counter broad dollar strength. BoJ board members, including Kazuyuki Masu, signaled that rate hikes could be warranted if inflation pressures persist, adding potential volatility to USD/JPY movements near the 160 level.
Technical Outlook
USD/JPY is consolidating around 158.47, with short-term moving averages beginning to turn higher. Immediate support sits at 157.50–156.40, while major support lies near 153.90–152.08. Resistance zones are 158.80–160.70, with the prior high of 160.71 remaining a key psychological level. A clean break above resistance could fuel further gains, while a drop below support would indicate fading momentum.
Read more on how Fed policy, inflation, and global energy risks are shaping USD/JPY movements in this article below.