Japan Data And Boj Outlook
Japan will also publish February trade figures on Thursday after exports rose 16.8% year on year in the previous release. Markets will also focus on comments from Governor Ueda for any timing on future tightening. On the US side, reduced Strait of Hormuz tensions eased demand for the Dollar as a safe haven. The New York Empire State Manufacturing index was -0.2 versus a 3.2 forecast. The Federal Reserve decision is due Wednesday, with rates expected to stay at 3.75%. The updated Summary of Economic Projections is due alongside the decision. Looking back a year ago, we recall the market dynamics in March 2025 when USD/JPY was pushing toward 160. The narrative was dominated by a massive policy gap, with the Bank of Japan holding its rate at 0.75% while the Federal Reserve stood firm at 3.75%. This wide differential was the primary driver for being long the dollar against the yen.Policy Convergence And Market Implications
Since that peak, the landscape has shifted significantly, making long dollar positions far more risky. The Federal Reserve, responding to slower growth, has initiated a cutting cycle, bringing its policy rate down to its current 2.75%. In contrast, the Bank of Japan has continued its slow normalization, hiking rates twice in late 2025 to bring its benchmark rate to 1.25%. This policy convergence has squeezed the crucial US-Japan 10-year bond yield spread, which has narrowed from over 350 basis points back in early 2025 to just 240 basis points today. This compression removes a key pillar of support for the pair and caps its upside potential. The current price of 154.50 reflects this new reality of a less attractive carry trade. With Japan’s national core CPI for February 2026 coming in at 2.3%, remaining stubbornly above the BoJ’s target, expectations for another rate hike this year are firming up. For traders, this suggests that selling call options with strike prices above 157.00 could be a prudent strategy to collect premium, as a return to the 160 level from 2025 seems unlikely. We see that past resistance as a psychological barrier that will be difficult to breach now. Given the reduced momentum, strategies like put spreads could also be considered to position for a gradual drift lower in the pair. The Yen’s safe-haven status, which was dormant during the 2025 rally, could re-emerge if the global economic slowdown deepens, adding another headwind for USD/JPY. The period of straightforward dollar strength we saw last year is clearly behind us. Create your live VT Markets account and start trading now.
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