- The Japanese Yen attracts some dip-buyers and reverses a part of the overnight losses.
- BoJ rate cut bets and growing recession fears drive safe-haven flows towards the JPY.
- Dovish Fed expectations weigh on the USD and also exert pressure on USD USD/JPY.
The Japanese Yen (JPY) trims a part of modest intraday gains against its American counterpart, though the near-term bias still seems tilted in favor of bullish traders. Concerns that harsher US reciprocal tariffs could negatively impact Japan’s economy, along with a slight improvement in the global risk sentiment, act as a headwind for the safe-haven JPY. However, the growing market acceptance that the Bank of Japan (BoJ) will continue raising interest rates in 2025, amid signs of broadening inflation, might hold back the JPY bears from placing aggressive bets.
Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump’s sweeping reciprocal tariffs raise the risk of a global economic slowdown. This should further contribute to limiting any meaningful JPY losses, which, along with the emergence of fresh US Dollar (USD) selling, keeps the USD/JPY pair below the 148.00 mark through the Asian session. Traders ramped up bets that a tariffs-driven US economic slowdown might force the Federal Reserve (Fed) to resume its rate-cutting cycle soon. This keeps the USD bulls on the defensive and should further benefit the lower-yielding JPY.
Japanese Yen bulls seen reluctant as improving global risk sentiment caps gains for safe-haven assets
- Data released on Monday showed that Nominal Wages in Japan rose 3.1% year-on-year in February compared to the previous month’s downwardly revised 1.8% increase. Meanwhile, inflation-adjusted real wages contracted 1.2% in February, marking the second consecutive monthly decline and suggesting that high inflation is weighing on earnings.
- In fact, the consumer inflation rate the government uses to calculate real wages grew 4.3% year-on-year. This comes on top of positive spring wage negotiations – which resulted in an agreement of 5.47% growth on average and offered a positive signal for the domestic economy – and backs the case for further policy normalization by the Bank of Japan.
- Investors remain worried that US President Donald Trump’s sweeping reciprocal tariffs will disrupt the global trading system and hit economic activity across the world. Furthermore, Trump upped the ante in his trade war with China and threatened an additional 50% tariff on China if it doesn’t withdraw a retaliatory 34% import fee on American products.
- This further fuels worries that steep trade barriers around the world’s largest consumer market could lead to a recession, which, in turn, assists the safe-haven Japanese Yen to attract some dip-buyers. The US Dollar, on the other hand, stalls a two-day-old recovery move from a multi-month low amid bets for aggressive interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve.
- Fed Chair Jerome Powell said on Friday that the US central bank was well positioned to wait for greater clarity before making changes like rate reductions and added that Trump’s tariffs could have a strong inflationary impact. Meanwhile, Trump called for the Fed to cut interest rates as soon as possible, arguing that the US economy is in a strong position.
- Moreover, traders are now pricing in a greater possibility that the Fed will resume its rate-cutting cycle in June and deliver at least four rate cuts by the end of this year. This, in turn, would result in the further narrowing of the rate differential between the US and Japan, which suggests that the path of least resistance for the lower-yielding JPY is to the upside.
- There isn’t any relevant market-moving economic data due for release from the US on Tuesday, leaving the USD at the mercy of trade-related developments and San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly’s scheduled speech. The focus, meanwhile, remains on the release of FOMC meeting minutes on Wednesday and US consumer inflation figures on Thursday.
USD/JPY needs to surpass 148.15 hurdle to support prospects for further recovery from multi-month low
From a technical perspective, the USD/JPY pair’s inability to find acceptance above the 148.00 mark and the subsequent slide warrant caution for bullish traders. Moreover, oscillators on the daily chart are holding in negative territory and are still away from being in the oversold zone, validating the near-term negative outlook for the currency pair. However, a sustained move beyond the Asian session high, around the 148.15 region, might trigger a short-covering rally and lift spot prices to the 148.70 intermediate hurdle en route to the 149.00 round figure. The next relevant barrier is pegged near the 149.35-149.40 region, which if cleared should pave the way for a move towards reclaiming the 150.00 psychological mark.
On the flip side, the 147.00 mark could offer some support, below which the USD/JPY pair could accelerate the slide back towards the 146.00 round figure before dropping to the 145.40 region. Some follow-through selling could make spot prices vulnerable and may weaken further below the 145.00 psychological mark and test the multi-month low, around the 144.55 region, touched on Monday. The subsequent downfall has the potential to drag the currency pair towards the 144.00 mark.
Risk sentiment FAQs
In the world of financial jargon the two widely used terms “risk-on” and “risk off” refer to the level of risk that investors are willing to stomach during the period referenced. In a “risk-on” market, investors are optimistic about the future and more willing to buy risky assets. In a “risk-off” market investors start to ‘play it safe’ because they are worried about the future, and therefore buy less risky assets that are more certain of bringing a return, even if it is relatively modest.
Typically, during periods of “risk-on”, stock markets will rise, most commodities – except Gold – will also gain in value, since they benefit from a positive growth outlook. The currencies of nations that are heavy commodity exporters strengthen because of increased demand, and Cryptocurrencies rise. In a “risk-off” market, Bonds go up – especially major government Bonds – Gold shines, and safe-haven currencies such as the Japanese Yen, Swiss Franc and US Dollar all benefit.
The Australian Dollar (AUD), the Canadian Dollar (CAD), the New Zealand Dollar (NZD) and minor FX like the Ruble (RUB) and the South African Rand (ZAR), all tend to rise in markets that are “risk-on”. This is because the economies of these currencies are heavily reliant on commodity exports for growth, and commodities tend to rise in price during risk-on periods. This is because investors foresee greater demand for raw materials in the future due to heightened economic activity.
The major currencies that tend to rise during periods of “risk-off” are the US Dollar (USD), the Japanese Yen (JPY) and the Swiss Franc (CHF). The US Dollar, because it is the world’s reserve currency, and because in times of crisis investors buy US government debt, which is seen as safe because the largest economy in the world is unlikely to default. The Yen, from increased demand for Japanese government bonds, because a high proportion are held by domestic investors who are unlikely to dump them – even in a crisis. The Swiss Franc, because strict Swiss banking laws offer investors enhanced capital protection.