It’s interesting to note that the greenback strengthened after renewed
Trump’s threats against Iran following the CPI report and could explain the strength
given the risk-off flows we witnessed afterwards.
Yesterday, Trump said that
the killing in Iran was stopping and that there were no plans for executions.
The market reacted by selling the dollar, which might have been a confirmation
that the focus has been indeed on Iran all this time. Unfortunately, we got
mixed reports after Trump’s comment and eventually most of the moves were faded
as the market erred on the cautious side.
In terms of monetary
policy, traders continue to expect 54 bps of easing by year-end. Fed members
continue to support the current patient and data-dependent stance. That helped to pause the selloff in the yen as we got a pullback
which eventually extended following the confirmation from PM Takaichi of an
imminent dissolution of the parliament to call snap elections in February.
Unfortunately, this might
not stop the depreciation in the Japanese Yen yet because the fundamentals
remain unfavourable for the currency amid expansionary fiscal policy and the
BoJ’s slow monetary policy normalisation keeping real rates in the negative
territory.
The central bank is still
placing a great deal on wage growth, so wage data and spring wage negotiations
remain key. The market is pricing around 40 bps of tightening by year end. The
outlook for the JPY remains bearish.
USDJPY TECHNICAL
ANALYSIS – DAILY TIMEFRAME
On the daily chart, we can
see that USDJPY probed above the 2025 high around 158.87 but eventually fell
back below the level following a barrage of verbal intervention from Japanese
officials. We can expect the sellers to step in around these levels with a defined
risk above the high to position for a drop into the 154.50 support. The buyers,
on the other hand, will want to see the price breaking higher again to extend
the rally into the 160.00 handle next.
USDJPY TECHNICAL
ANALYSIS – 4 HOUR TIMEFRAME
On the 4 hour chart, we can
see that we have an upward trendline defining the bullish momentum. If we get a
pullback into the trendline, we can expect the buyers to lean on it with a
defined risk below it to keep targeting new highs. The sellers, on the other
hand, will look for a break lower to pile in for a drop into the 154.50 support
next.
USDJPY TECHNICAL
ANALYSIS – 1 HOUR TIMEFRAME
On the 1 hour chart, we can
see that the price broke below the minor upward trendline that was defining the
bullish momentum on this timeframe. This might be a signal of a bigger pullback
into the next major trendline. There’s a counter-trendline defining the current
consolidation. The buyers will likely continue to lean on it to keep pushing into
new highs, while the sellers will look for a break lower to increase the
bearish bets into the major trendline
