USD/JPY holds near 158.70 as traders balance Fed caution and Middle East risks
USD/JPY trades slightly firmer, capped below 159.00
The U.S. dollar edged higher against the yen in Thursday’s Asian session, with the USD/JPY pair hovering around 158.70, up about 0.10% on the day. The pair stayed below the 159.00 level after rebounding from Wednesday’s dip under 158.00, its lowest point in nearly three weeks.
Despite the modest gain, dollar strength remained limited by a dovish Federal Reserve outlook, even as geopolitical tensions in the Middle East continued to underpin demand for the U.S. currency.
Policy divergence and geopolitics set the tone
Traders adopted a cautious approach as reports pointed to fragile ceasefire conditions involving the United States and Iran, alongside disruptions to tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz. These developments kept regional sentiment mildly risk-averse and helped maintain underlying dollar support.
At the same time, the Fed’s preference for patience on policy changes constrained the upside for USD/JPY. Recent U.S. Consumer Price Index data showed a 0.2% month‑over‑month rise, slightly below the 0.3% forecast, reinforcing expectations that interest rates will remain on hold for now.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell told the Economic Club of New York that “sustained evidence of disinflation toward our two percent target is necessary before any policy pivot,” a remark that has tempered the dollar’s advance against major counterparts.
Bank of Japan tightening contrasts with Fed stance
In contrast, the yen continues to reflect the Bank of Japan’s ongoing shift away from its ultra-loose stance. The BoJ began tightening in March 2024 after roughly a decade of highly accommodative policy, seeking to respond to firmer inflation pressures.
Rising energy costs and stronger wage growth have been central to the BoJ’s rationale. Japan’s latest “shunto” spring wage talks delivered an average pay rise of 4.1%, the strongest in over 30 years, giving the central bank more confidence in its policy normalization path.
Even so, the yen remains under pressure from the policy gap that opened between Tokyo and other major central banks from 2022 onward, a divergence that weakened the currency and has only been partly unwound since rate hikes resumed.
The BoJ’s upcoming policy meeting on April 28 is now seen as the next key inflection point, with markets watching for more detail on the pace of balance sheet reduction.
Technical picture shows consolidation with downside risk
Technically, USD/JPY is holding above a support band at 158.25–158.20, an area that coincides with the 200‑period exponential moving average on intraday charts. This zone is acting as the immediate floor for the pair.
The relative strength index is near 42, suggesting that recent downward momentum has cooled but conditions are not yet oversold. However, the moving average convergence divergence indicator remains in negative territory, pointing to lingering downside risk if the pair fails to break decisively higher.
A clean drop through the 158.20 support level could pave the way for a deeper retracement in the near term, while a sustained move above the current range would be needed to restore stronger bullish momentum.
Middle East tensions keep dollar supported
The wider geopolitical backdrop continues to lend support to dollar demand. Lloyd’s List Intelligence reported that maritime insurance premiums for tankers transiting the Strait of Hormuz have climbed by a further 5 basis points, highlighting elevated risk perceptions in a key global shipping corridor.
These higher costs and shipping disruptions add to the risk‑off undertone that typically benefits the dollar against lower-yielding currencies such as the yen, even as central bank policy expectations pull in the opposite direction.
Price compression hints at breakout risk
The combination of divergent monetary paths, softening but still elevated inflation, and unresolved Middle East tensions is generating a period of price compression in USD/JPY. The pair has traded in a relatively tight band this week, suggesting that the current stability could precede a sharper, direction‑setting move once a clear catalyst appears.
Traders are now focused on upcoming inflation releases from both the United States and Japan, along with any further developments in Middle Eastern maritime routes, as the most likely triggers to break the current equilibrium and establish a new directional trend.
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