Middle East peace hopes triggered a broad risk-on rally on June 11, pushing USD/JPY below the closely watched 160 level and lifting risk-sensitive currencies like the Australian dollar.
The yen strengthened past the 160-per-dollar threshold for the first time in a week as renewed prospects for a Middle East ceasefire drove a broad unwind of safe-haven dollar positions, with the greenback falling against all Group-of-10 peers.
"The market is pricing in a material de-escalation probability that didn't exist 48 hours ago," said Elena Fischer, geopolitical risk strategist at Edgen. "If a formal truce emerges, the dollar could give back another 2 percent to 3 percent from current levels."
USD/JPY fell as low as 159.42, breaching the 160 line that Japanese authorities have flagged as a potential intervention trigger, before settling near 159.80. The Australian dollar gained 0.14 percent to $0.7054, while the euro rose 0.1 percent to $1.1545. The dollar index slipped 0.24 percent to 99.77, extending its decline from Monday's two-month high of 100.21.
The shift in sentiment hinges on whether the truce holds. Iran and Israel said Monday they had halted attacks after an appeal from President Donald Trump, though Tehran warned it would resume hostilities if Israel continued to strike Hezbollah in Lebanon. A durable peace deal would likely ease oil prices — Brent crude traded near $93 a barrel — and reduce the inflation premium that has bolstered expectations for further Federal Reserve rate hikes.
The Yen's Intervention Calculus
For Japanese authorities, the yen's sudden strength presents a different kind of challenge. The Ministry of Finance has spent much of the past month warning it would intervene to support the currency if it weakened too rapidly, with the 160 level serving as an informal line in the sand. Now, with USD/JPY falling below that threshold on its own, the intervention calculus shifts.
"The BOJ has been preparing for a scenario where they need to defend the yen, not manage its appreciation," said Lee Hardman, senior currency economist at MUFG. "A sustained move below 158 would test whether they're equally comfortable with a stronger currency, which would weigh on export competitiveness."
Markets have fully priced in a 25-basis-point rate hike at the Bank of Japan's June 16 policy meeting, with some traders now speculating on a larger move. Governor Kazuo Ueda's absence from recent discussions has fueled uncertainty about internal policy dynamics, though the central bank has signaled its readiness to act if inflation pressures persist. Japan's wholesale inflation accelerated in May at the fastest pace in three years, data showed Wednesday, as energy costs from the Middle East conflict broadened price pressures across the economy.
Cross-Asset Ripple Effects
The risk-on rotation extended beyond currencies. Gold stabilized near $4,077 an ounce after touching a six-month low earlier in the week, while Asian equities pared losses after a Wall Street selloff triggered by hot US inflation data. The S&P 500 fell 1.4 percent on Wednesday after the May Consumer Price Index showed a 4.2 percent annual increase, the fastest since April 2023.
Oil prices, which had surged above $94 a barrel on Brent earlier in the week after tit-for-tat strikes between the US and Iran, retreated as peace hopes reduced the supply-risk premium. The Strait of Hormuz handles about 21 percent of global oil trade, and Iran's earlier threats to close the waterway had pushed crude to multi-month highs.
The last time a similar geopolitical de-escalation occurred — during the April 2026 ceasefire between the US and Iran — the dollar index fell 1.8 percent over the following two weeks while emerging-market currencies gained an average of 2.3 percent, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. A repeat of that pattern would push USD/JPY toward 157, a level not seen since late May.
The Federal Reserve's next policy decision on June 17 now carries added weight. Traders see a 70 percent probability of a rate hike by December, according to CME FedWatch, but a sustained drop in oil prices from a peace deal could reduce the urgency for tightening. "The clock is ticking loudly to get the Strait of Hormuz open, either through force or through a truce," said Brian Jacobsen, chief economic strategist at Annex Wealth Management. "The Fed isn't going to try to guess when that will happen, so President Trump needs to deliver them certainty before they meet."
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.