The yen's slide to a two-year low near 160.80 has put Japanese authorities on intervention alert, creating a tug-of-war between carry trade flows and government pushback.
USD/JPY consolidated above 160.50 on Thursday, hovering near its highest since July 2024, as the 450-basis-point rate gap between the Bank of Japan and the Federal Reserve continued fueling yen carry trades despite rising intervention threats.
"Japan is in a difficult position — the fundamental driver of yen weakness is the rate differential, which verbal intervention alone cannot close," said Minori Uchida, chief FX strategist at MUFG Bank.
The BOJ raised its policy rate to 1 percent on Tuesday, the highest since 1995, while the Fed held its target range at 3.5 percent to 3.75 percent for the fourth straight meeting. The 275-basis-point gap has kept the yen under pressure, with USD/JPY gaining 1.1 percent over the past month and breaching the 160 mark earlier this week for the first time since July 2024.
If USD/JPY pushes above 161, the probability of actual intervention rises sharply, analysts said. Japan spent a record 9.8 trillion yen ($61 billion) intervening in October 2022 when the pair approached 152, and a repeat could trigger a sudden 3 percent to 5 percent reversal, disrupting global carry trade positions.
Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara said during a regular press conference Thursday that the government is ready to respond appropriately to exchange-rate moves at any time, the strongest verbal warning since the pair entered the 160 zone. Similar language preceded Japan's intervention in September and October 2022, when USD/JPY was trading near 146 and 152, respectively.
The technical setup suggests bullish momentum is moderating but not exhausted. The relative strength index sits in the low 60s, below the overbought threshold of 70, while the moving average convergence divergence line holds just above zero. The 200-day exponential moving average at 156.23 provides the nearest support floor, meaning any corrective decline is likely to attract buyers as long as the pair stays above that level.
The carry trade dynamic remains the dominant structural force. With the BOJ's rate at 1 percent and the Fed's at 3.5 percent to 3.75 percent, investors can borrow yen at near-zero effective cost and deploy proceeds into higher-yielding dollar assets. Net short yen positioning among leveraged funds reached $8.2 billion as of last week, near the highest level this year, according to Commodity Futures Trading Commission data.
The broader market implications extend beyond USD/JPY. A sustained yen selloff pressures Japanese import costs, with Japan's trade deficit widening to 1.2 trillion yen in May as energy import bills rose. For global markets, a sudden BOJ intervention could trigger a broader risk-off move, pushing the Nikkei 225 lower and strengthening the yen against other major currencies, including the euro and Australian dollar.
The last time Japan intervened at scale was October 2022, when USD/JPY hit 151.94. The BOJ sold an estimated $42 billion in a single day, driving the pair down more than 5 percent within 48 hours. Current levels above 160 suggest the next intervention, if it comes, could be even larger.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.