The Japanese Yen (JPY) extends the sideways consolidative price move against its American counterpart for the second straight day on Thursday amid mixed fundamental cues. Expectations that domestic political uncertainty could give the Bank of Japan (BoJ) more reasons to delay interest rate hikes, along with a generally positive risk tone, acts as a headwind for the safe-haven JPY. The US Dollar (USD), on the other hand, struggles to attract any meaningful buyers amid rising bets for a more aggressive policy easing by the Federal Reserve (Fed), which, in turn, seems to cap the USD/JPY pair.
Meanwhile, a slight increase in Japan's Producer Prices Index (PPI) in August, along with an upward revision of the Q2 GDP print, a rise in household spending and real wages, backs the case for an imminent BoJ rate hike. This marks a significant divergence in comparison to dovish Fed expectations, which should continue to benefit the lower-yielding JPY and suggests that the path of least resistance for the USD/JPY pair is to the downside. Traders, however, seem reluctant to place aggressive bets and opt to wait for the release of the US consumer inflation data, due later during the North American session.
The USD/JPY pair's inability to build on this week's goodish rebound from the vicinity of the August monthly swing low and negative oscillators on the daily chart favors bearish traders. Some follow-through selling and acceptance below the 147.00 mark will reaffirm the outlook, which, in turn, should pave the way for a fall towards retesting the 146.30-146.20 support zone. Some follow-through selling, leading to a subsequent breakdown through the 146.00 mark, could drag spot prices to the 145.35 intermediate support en route to the 145.00 psychological mark.
On the flip side, any attempted move up is more likely to attract fresh sellers near the 147.75-147.80 region, which should cap the USD/JPY pair near the 148.00 round figure. A sustained strength beyond the latter, however, might trigger a short-covering rally towards challenging the very important 200-day Simple Moving Average (SMA), currently pegged near the 148.75 zone. This is closely followed by the 149.00 mark and the monthly swing high, around the 149.15 region, which, if cleared decisively, might shift the bias in favor of bulls.
The Producer Price Index released by the Bank of Japan is a measure of prices for goods purchased by domestic corporates in Japan. The PPI is correlated with the CPI (Consumer Price Index) and is a way to measure changes in manufacturing cost and inflation in Japan. A high reading is seen as anticipatory of a rate hike and is positive (or bullish) for the JPY, while a low reading is seen as negative (or Bearish).
Read more.Last release: Wed Sep 10, 2025 23:50
Frequency: Monthly
Actual: 2.7%
Consensus: 2.7%
Previous: 2.6%
Source: Statistics Bureau of Japan