The Japanese Yen (JPY) ticks higher against its American counterpart during the Asian session on Thursday and reverses a part of the previous day's retracement slide from the weekly high. Minutes from the Bank of Japan's (BoJ) March meeting indicated that the central bank remains ready to tighten further if economic and price outlooks hold. This, along with reviving safe-haven demand, is seen underpinning the JPY, which, along with the emergence of fresh US Dollar (USD) selling, keeps the USD/JPY pair depressed below the 144.00 round figure.
The optimism over the start of US-China trade talks later this week in Switzerland fades rather quickly amid the uncertainty over how a new deal between the world's two largest economies might be structured. Moreover, US President Donald Trump denied lowering tariffs on China, tempering hopes for a quick resolution to the tit-for-tat trade war between the world's two largest economies. Moreover, persistent geopolitical risks keep investors on edge and turn out to be a key factor behind the JPY's outperformance against a broadly weaker USD.
From a technical perspective, the intraday failure near the 144.00 mark favors the USD/JPY pair amid still negative oscillators on the daily chart and against the backdrop of last week's rejection near the 200-period Simple Moving Average (SMA) on the 4-hour chart. Some follow-through selling below the 143.40-143.35 immediate support will reaffirm the negative outlook and drag spot prices below the 143.00 mark, back towards the 142.35 area, or the weekly low. This is followed by the 142.00 round figure, which, if broken, could make the currency pair vulnerable to weakening further.
On the flip side, the 144.00 mark might continue to act as an immediate hurdle ahead of the 144.25-144.30 supply zone. A sustained strength beyond the latter might trigger a short-covering rally and allow the USD/JPY pair to reclaim the 145.00 psychological mark. The momentum could extend further towards the 200-period SMA on the 4-hour chart, currently pegged near the 145.25 region, en route to last week's swing high, around the 146.00 neighborhood.
The Bank of Japan publishes a study of economic movements in Japan after the actual meeting. These meetings are held to review economic developments inside and outside of Japan and indicate a sign of new fiscal policy. Any changes in this report tend to affect the JPY volatility. Generally speaking, if the BoJ minutes show a hawkish outlook, that is seen as positive (or bullish) for the JPY, while a dovish outlook is seen as negative (or bearish).
Read more.Last release: Wed May 07, 2025 23:50
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Source: Bank of Japan