- The Japanese Yen drifts lower for the second straight day and is pressured by a combination of factors.
- The BoJ’s cautious stance, softer domestic data and a positive risk tone undermine the safe-haven JPY.
- The upbeat US NFP-inspired USD strength lifts the USD/JPY pair back closer to the multi-decade high.
The Japanese Yen (JPY) extends Friday’s retracement slide from over a two-week high touched and slides back closer to a multi-decade low during the Asian session on Monday. The Bank of Japan’s (BoJ) dovish signal, indicating that it will stick to its accommodative policy stance for some time, along with a positive risk tone, turn out to be key factors undermining the safe-haven JPY. Moreover, softer domestic data, showing that real wages in Japan fell in February for the 23rd consecutive month, exert additional pressure on the JPY.
The US Dollar (USD), on the other hand, remains supported by the upbeat US jobs report released on Friday, which suggested the Federal Reserve (Fed) may delay cutting interest rates. Moreover, investors scaled back their expectations for three rate cuts in 2024, which remains supportive of elevated US Treasury bond yields. This, in turn, pushes the USD/JPY pair beyond the mid-151.00s during the Asian session, though fears that Japanese authorities will intervene to stem the JPY weakness might keep a lid on any further upside.
Daily Digest Market Movers: Japanese Yen is undermined by BoJ’s cautious approach and softer wage data from Japan
- The Bank of Japan’s (BoJ) cautious approach towards further policy tightening, along with softer wage data from Japan, dragged the Japanese Yen lower for the second straight day on Monday.
- The Bank of Japan struck a dovish tone at the end of the March monetary policy meeting and stopped short of offering any guidance about future steps, or the pace of policy normalization.
- The labor ministry reported that Japanese workers’ inflation-adjusted real wages fell by 1.3% in February from a year earlier as compared to the previous month’s revised decline of 1.1%.
- Data published by the Ministry of Finance showed Japan’s current account rose to 2.64 trillion Yen in February, the highest since October last year, though was below consensus estimates.
- Reports that progress has been made in Gaza ceasefire talks boost investors’ confidence and turn out to be another factor that undermines demand for the safe-haven JPY.
- Japanese government officials continued with their jawboning to defend the domestic currency, albeit doing little to impress the JPY bulls or hinder the USD/JPY pair’s move up.
- The US Dollar draws support from the upbeat US jobs data released on Friday, which forced investors to trim their bets for a June interest rate cut by the Federal Reserve.
- The popularly known NFP report showed that the US economy added 303K jobs in March and the unemployment rate fell to 3.8% from 3.9% in the previous month.
- The data, meanwhile, gives the Fed more reason to stay patient and changed the odds of rate cuts this year from three to two, which pushes the US Treasury bond yields higher.
- The market focus now shifts to the release of the US consumer inflation figures for March, due on Wednesday, which will be followed by the FOMC meeting minutes.
- Investors will look for more cues on potential Fed rate cuts in 2024 before positioning for the next leg of a directional move for the buck and the USD/JPY pair.
Technical Analysis: USD/JPY seems poised to appreciate further, move beyond 152.00 or multi-decade peak awaited
From a technical perspective, bulls might still wait for sustained strength and acceptance above the 152.00 mark before placing fresh bets. Given that oscillators on the daily chart are holding in the positive territory and are still away from being in the overbought zone, the USD/JPY pair might then resume its uptrend witnessed over the past month or so from the March trough.
On the flip side, the 151.30 horizontal zone now seems to protect the immediate downside ahead of the 151.00 mark. Some follow-through selling will expose Friday’s swing low, around the 150.30 region. This is followed by the 150.00 psychological mark, which if broken decisively will shift the near-term bias in favor of bearish traders. The USD/JPY pair might then slide to the 149.35-149.30 region en route to the 149.00 mark.