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Japanese Yen Approaches 160 Again: Safe-Haven Flows Surge into Dollar, Is Japan's Intervention Space Disappearing?
The Japanese yen is under pressure again, but this time Tokyo’s options are more limited than before. The Middle East conflict has driven a large influx of safe-haven funds into the dollar, pushing the yen close to the 160 level, while Japanese authorities face a tricky reality: the current depreciation is driven not by speculative selling but by fundamental factors, fundamentally weakening the legitimacy and effectiveness of foreign exchange interventions.
According to Reuters on Friday, Japanese policymakers privately admitted that intervention in the current environment might be ineffective—ongoing demand for the dollar would easily offset any intervention efforts.
Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama was cautious when asked about the possibility of intervention this week, only saying that the government is ready to act “at any time” and is “focused on the impact of exchange rate fluctuations on people’s lives,” deliberately avoiding the usual phrases like “combat speculative selling.” Some analysts warn that if officials remain silent, the yen could further fall to 165.
The weakening yen combined with rising oil prices is increasing Japan’s import costs and inflation risks, shifting market attention quickly to the Bank of Japan. A March 12 report from JPMorgan pointed out that the BOJ is caught in a dual dilemma of geopolitical uncertainty and a weak yen, making it difficult to ease its stance on monetary policy normalization.
This time is different: the logic of intervention has fundamentally changed
In the past two large-scale interventions by Japan—2022 and 2024—they occurred amid massive speculative selling of the yen, when arbitrage trading was prevalent, and the main driver was the U.S.-Japan interest rate differential. The goal was to combat clearly speculative positions.
However, the nature of this depreciation is entirely different. According to the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), as of early March, net yen short positions were about 16,575 contracts, far below the approximately 180,000 contracts during Japan’s last large-scale intervention in July 2024. The lack of speculative pressure significantly weakens the traditional basis for intervention.
Shota Ryu, FX strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities, said, “If Japan intervenes now, it probably won’t be very effective because as long as the Middle East situation remains unresolved, safe-haven dollar buying will continue.” He also pointed out that intervention could even backfire—if the yen temporarily rebounds due to intervention, speculators might take the opportunity to short again.
On the international coordination front, Japan also faces obstacles. Under the G7 framework, consensus on foreign exchange intervention is aimed at “speculative volatility that deviates from economic fundamentals,” and if this round of yen depreciation is deemed driven by fundamentals, Japan will find it difficult to gain allies’ support.
Reuters reports that, for this reason, Tokyo is now focusing on encouraging the international community to coordinate efforts to stabilize oil prices—Katayama said in Parliament this week that Japan has “strongly urged” G7 partners to hold a meeting to discuss measures to address soaring oil prices. Japan has also taken the lead in releasing strategic oil reserves, creating momentum for joint actions led by the International Energy Agency.
Focus shifts to the Bank of Japan: rate hike window may open earlier
With limited room for foreign exchange intervention and doubts about international coordination, market attention is turning to the Bank of Japan, with rate hike expectations becoming the last line of defense supporting the yen.
A JPMorgan report indicated that the likelihood of policy adjustments at this upcoming BOJ meeting is low. The Iran conflict provides the BOJ with ample “wait-and-see” reasons, aligning with mainstream market expectations. However, the report also emphasized that after delaying policy normalization, the BOJ will find it difficult to abandon its hawkish stance—if it softens rate hike expectations amid ongoing yen pressure, it risks further accelerating depreciation.
JPMorgan expects the BOJ to signal that it will maintain its normalization path, assess uncertainties related to the Iran conflict before deciding on rate hikes, and avoid raising rates during market turmoil. This statement neither commits to action in April nor rules out rate hikes if conditions improve. The report suggests that the “stability” standard will largely depend on the yen’s pressure levels at that time.
JPMorgan also pointed out that the BOJ’s situation differs fundamentally from the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank: the latter two have policy rates near neutral levels and can wait calmly; the BOJ remains in a highly accommodative stance, and with global inflation concerns possibly reigniting, further delay will make the BOJ more conspicuous and continue to pressure the yen downward. “The BOJ has less time to wait than its peers.”
Akira Moroga, Chief Market Strategist at Aozora Bank, said that from a fundamental perspective, a rate hike in July remains the most natural timing. “But if yen depreciation intensifies, an earlier move in April wouldn’t be surprising, even if the BOJ might not explicitly link it to the exchange rate.”
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