Japanese Yen Stabilizes Against USD Amid Mixed Market Signals
The Japanese Yen (JPY) remains range-bound against the US Dollar (USD) on Friday, fluctuating between slight gains and losses in early European trading. Despite recent verbal intervention from Japanese authorities to support the JPY, skepticism around the Bank of Japan’s (BoJ) ability to implement further rate hikes limits the currency’s upward potential.
Optimism around potential growth and inflation from Trump’s economic policies also provides a tailwind for US Treasury yields, overshadowing the Federal Reserve’s dovish stance. This, combined with renewed buying interest in the USD, helps cushion the USD/JPY pair from further declines.
Yen Under Pressure Despite Intervention and Economic Data Weakness
On Friday, Japanese government data revealed a second consecutive month of declines in household spending, with a 1.3% drop in September, following a similar trend in inflation-adjusted wages. These economic headwinds may challenge the BoJ’s ability to pursue additional rate hikes.
Further impacting the Yen, Japanese officials reiterated their commitment to monitoring the foreign exchange market closely. Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshimasa Hayashi emphasized a high level of urgency, while Vice Finance Minister Atsushi Mimura indicated the government’s readiness to counter excessive currency movements. Finance Minister Katsunobu Kato expressed concern over the potential impact of President-elect Donald Trump’s policies on Japan’s domestic economy.
Meanwhile, the USD/JPY pair rebounded above 154.00 following Trump’s election victory, prompting verbal intervention from Japan’s leadership. Quarterly data from the Ministry of Finance (MOF) revealed ¥5.53 trillion spent on currency interventions between June and July.
Technical Outlook: USD/JPY Maintains Bullish Bias Above Key Support Levels
Technically, the USD/JPY’s recent dip found support near the 152.70–152.65 level, a pivotal area that may now act as a buffer. A break below this could accelerate a correction towards the 152.00 mark, with further downside potentially reaching the 100-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) around 151.70–151.65. Continued selling pressure would signal that the pair’s strong recent uptrend has stalled, opening the door for deeper declines.
On the upside, resistance is expected around the 153.50 level, followed by a key supply zone near 153.85–153.90. A move back above 154.00 could position the pair to retest Thursday’s multi-month high around 154.70, with momentum potentially extending to the psychological 155.00 level and the 155.20 zone, which aligns with the July 30 swing high.