The Japanese Yen (JPY) has been the only G10 currency losing against the dollar since the start of June, with the key driver being a dovish reassessment of Bank of Japan rate expectations after the latest meeting, ING's FX analyst Francesco Pesole notes.
"Tokyo’s June CPI data released this morning carried the potential for a revamp in hawkish bets, but the print was softer than expected, at 3.1% for both core and headline inflation versus the expected 3.1%."
"While the figures are still above the BoJ’s supposed tolerance level, they mark a potential inflection point that endorses a more cautious approach to monetary tightening. Retail sales figures for May also showed a MoM contraction."
"The Yen remains, however, broadly attractive in our view. Our model shows USD/JPY is now trading below its near-term fair value of 144.0, and the upcoming risk of tariff-related turmoil in July, plus limited room for further dovish repricing in BoJ expectations, suggest a retest of early-June 142.4 lows looks very much possible."