The Japanese Yen (JPY) retains bullish bias heading into the European session on Thursday, though it lacks follow-through and remains close to over a one-week low touched against its American counterpart the previous day. Fading hopes for a quick resolution to the US-China tradeoff, along with expectations that Japan will strike a trade deal with the US and bets for more interest rate hikes by the Bank of Japan (BoJ), help revive demand for the safe-haven JPY.
Meanwhile, the prospects for more aggressive policy easing by the Federal Reserve (Fed) mark a big divergence in comparison to hawkish BoJ expectations and further underpin the lower-yielding JPY. The US Dollar (USD), on the other hand, struggles to capitalize on a two-day-old recovery move from a multi-year low and contributes to the offered tone surrounding the USD/JPY pair. That said, a positive risk tone is holding back the JPY bulls from placing fresh bets.

From a technical perspective, the overnight close above the 23.6% Fibonacci retracement level of the March-April downfall and the 143.00 mark was seen as a key trigger for the USD/JPY bulls. Moreover, oscillators on hourly charts have been gaining positive traction and support prospects for the emergence of dip-buyers near the 142.45-142.40 region. This should help limit the downside near the 142.00 round figure, below which spot prices could slide to mid-141.00s en route to the 141.10-141.00 region. The downward trajectory could extend further towards the 140.50 intermediate support and eventually expose the multi-month low – levels below the 140.00 psychological mark touched on Tuesday.
On the flip side, momentum back above the 143.00 mark might confront some hurdle near the 143.55 area or the overnight swing high. Some follow-through buying has the potential to lift the USD/JPY pair beyond the 144.00 round figure, towards the 144.35 confluence. The latter comprises 38.2% Fibo. level and the 200-period Simple Moving Average (SMA) on the 4-hour chart, which if cleared decisively should pave the way for some meaningful recovery in the near term.
The Durable Goods Orders, released by the US Census Bureau, measures the cost of orders received by manufacturers for durable goods, which means goods planned to last for three years or more, such as motor vehicles and appliances. As those durable products often involve large investments they are sensitive to the US economic situation. The final figure shows the state of US production activity. Generally speaking, a high reading is bullish for the USD.
Read more.Last release: Wed Mar 26, 2025 12:30
Frequency: Monthly
Actual: 0.9%
Consensus: -1%
Previous: 3.1%
Source: US Census Bureau
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