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USD/JPY signal: forecast as the Japanese yen plunges to 162

USD/JPY signal: forecast as the Japanese yen plunges to 162
Crispus Nyaga
Jun 30, 2026, 00:34 A.M.

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JPY long via FX basket

Buy JPY exposure using a JPY long basket (e.g., long USD/JPY hedged into JPY via JPY futures or long JPY vs EUR/GBP). Rationale: the core driver is the US–Japan rate differential, but the article highlights intervention capacity and wedge-style technical risk for USD/JPY—so yen strength can spread across crosses if BoJ acts.

Key Risk: US yields fall or Japan signals more hikes without intervention, keeping the rate gap wide enough that JPY keeps weakening across crosses.

USD/JPY short

Sell USD/JPY (target 160, then 158) because the pair just broke 162 and is in a rising wedge, which often leads to a bearish breakout. The article also flags a potential BoJ response/intervention, and the yen’s weakness is already extreme (40-year low), setting up a sharp mean reversion.

Key Risk: BoJ stays passive and the Fed gets a strong NFP/CPI narrative, pushing USD/JPY through 162 and toward new highs.

  • The USD/JPY pair soared to the highest level in over 40 years.
  • The Bank of Japan (BoJ) is considering ways to respond and boost the currency.
  • The pair has formed a rising wedge, pointing to a reversal.

The Japanese yen continued its strong downward trend this week, reaching its lowest level in over 40 years. The USD/JPY crossed the crucial resistance of 162, bringing its 12-month gains to 12.3%. 

BoJ prepares response to the weaker yen

The USD/JPY pair continued its recent downward trend this week as the US Dollar Index (DXY) rose modestly. After falling for three consecutive days, the index rebounded to 101.31.

The Japanese yen has slumped mostly because of the ongoing interest rate differentials between the US and Japan. The Federal Reserve has moved interest rates to between 3.50% and 3.75%, with officials hinting that they will hike this year if inflation remains stubbornly high. 

Recent data showed that the headline CPI has remained above the Fed’s 2% target in the past five years, putting more pressure on Kevin Warsh. 

The Bank of Japan, on the other hand, hiked interest rates to 1% in the last meeting to contain inflation. Despite this hike, the interest rate differential between the US and Japan remains substantially high, making the dollar more attractive.

Traders are now waiting for a potential response from the BoJ. In a statement, Satsuki Katayama, the country’s finance minister, said that an appropriate decision will be made.

It is unclear what options the BoJ has to boost the value of the Japanese yen. For one, it has already pumped over $73 billion to buy the currency this year. While the intervention in April was effective, the Japanese yen weakened after that.

The bank can decide to deliver more interest rate hikes to make the yen more attractive. Such a move, however, will boost the government’s interest payments substantially since Japan has one of the biggest debt in the world.

Key Japan and US data ahead

There will be some key catalysts to watch ahead. Japan will publish the quarterly Tankan survey data on Wednesday, which will shed more light on the state of the economy.

The other key data to watch will be from the United States, where the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) will publish the latest non-farm payrolls (NFP) report. Economists expect the data to show that the economy added over 114k jobs last month as the unemployment rate remained at 4.3%.

A strong jobs report will mean that the Fed will have a justification for hiking interest rates later this year, which will boost the US dollar against the Japanese yen. 

The other key USD/JPY news will come from Portugal, where the European Central Bank (ECB) is hosting its annual conference. Fed’s Kevin Warsh and BoJ’s Kazuo Ueda will provide a preview of what to expect.

USD/JPY technical analysis

USDJPY chart | Source: TradingView

The daily chart shows that the USD/JPY pair has been in a strong uptrend in the past few months and is now trading at its highest point in over 40 years. It has remained above all moving averages, which have provided it with substantial support. 

On the other hand, the pair has formed a rising wedge pattern, which is made up of two ascending and converging trends. This pattern normally leads to a bearish breakout over time. As such, there is a possibility that the pair will dive in the coming days as sellers target the key support of 160. This will happen if the BoJ launches some intervention.