Japanese authorities likely stepped into currency markets for the first time since April, sending the yen sharply higher from a 40-year low of 162.27 per dollar.
Japanese authorities likely stepped into currency markets for the first time since April, sending the yen sharply higher from a 40-year low of 162.27 per dollar.

Japanese authorities likely stepped into currency markets for the first time since April, sending the yen sharply higher from a 40-year low of 162.27 per dollar.
The yen surged against the dollar on Thursday in a move traders attributed to official intervention, just as Japan's currency had slumped to its weakest level in four decades at 162.27 per dollar.
"Intervention shouldn't be dependent on a certain level, but a new cycle high is a sensitive level that re-ignites anxiety around currency weakness domestically," Julia Wang, North Asia chief investment officer at Nomura, said.
USD/JPY tumbled as much as 0.5% in early Asian trading on July 2, with the move coming ahead of the closely watched US nonfarm payrolls report. The Bank of Japan raised its benchmark rate to 1% in June, the highest level in more than three decades, yet the wide interest-rate and real-yield differentials between Japan and the US have continued to favor yen carry trades.
Record speculative short positions in the yen mean a sustained intervention campaign could trigger a sharp squeeze, disrupting carry trades and broader FX markets. The NFP data will test whether the intervention holds or gets overwhelmed, potentially causing further abrupt moves in the currency pair.
Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama said Tuesday the government was ready to take decisive action against excessive currency moves, a stance confirmed between Japan and the US. Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara echoed the warning at a regular press conference, saying the government would work to build an economy less vulnerable to FX volatility while remaining prepared to intervene.
The last time Japanese authorities intervened in the currency market was in April 2024, when USD/JPY traded near 160. That intervention triggered a sharp but short-lived reversal, with the pair recovering within weeks as yield differentials reasserted themselves. The current gap between US and Japanese 10-year yields stands at roughly 300 basis points, continuing to incentivize the carry trade that has driven the yen lower.
Record Shorts Raise Squeeze Risk
Speculative positioning in the yen has reached extreme levels, with net short positions hitting a record, according to CFTC data. This creates a vulnerability: any sustained intervention could force a rapid unwinding of those bets, amplifying the yen's gains. Wang at Nomura said any intervention would be unlikely to change the longer-term direction of the currency, arguing that the interest-rate differential remains the dominant driver.
The BoJ's rate hike to 1% in June marked its first increase since December, when it lifted rates to 0.75%. The move came as Japan grappled with rising inflationary pressures, partly fueled by higher energy prices during the Iran conflict. Despite the tightening, Japan's real yields remain deeply negative, keeping the yen under structural pressure.
NFP Data Looms as Next Test
The US nonfarm payrolls report, due Friday, represents the next major event for USD/JPY. A strong reading would reinforce the case for the Federal Reserve to maintain higher rates for longer, widening the yield gap and potentially pushing the yen back toward its lows. A weak print, by contrast, would validate the intervention and could accelerate the squeeze on short positions.
For now, traders remain on edge. The combination of record speculative shorts, a multi-decade low in the yen, and a major US data release creates conditions for elevated volatility regardless of whether authorities continue to intervene.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.