The Japanese Yen (JPY) retreats after touching a one-month high against its American counterpart and extends its steady intraday descent heading into the European session on Friday. Israel-Hamas ceasefire deal and a generally positive tone around the equity markets undermine demand for traditional safe-haven assets, including the JPY. Apart from this, the emergence of some US Dollar (USD) dip-buying assists the USD/JPY pair to stage a goodish intraday recovery of around 75 pips from sub-155.00 levels.
Any meaningful JPY depreciation, however, seems elusive in the wake of rising bets that the Bank of Japan (BoJ) will hike interest rates again next week. The expectations were lifted by BoJ Governor Kazuo Ueda and Deputy Governor Ryozo Himino's remarks earlier this week. Furthermore, expectations that softer inflation in the US will allow the Federal Reserve (Fed) to cut rates further this year should keep a lid on the buck and the USD/JPY pair. Traders now look to the US housing market data for some impetus.
From a technical perspective, sustained break and acceptance below the 155.00 psychological mark could drag the USD/JPY pair towards the 154.60-154.55 region, representing the lower boundary of a multi-month-old ascending channel. Some follow-through selling will be seen as a fresh trigger for bearish traders and make spot prices vulnerable to accelerate the slide to the 154.00 mark en route to the next relevant support near the 153.35-153.30 horizontal zone.
On the flip side, attempted recovery might now confront stiff resistance near the 156.00 mark ahead of the 156.30-156.35 horizontal zone. The next relevant hurdle is pegged near the 156.65-156.70 region, above which the USD/JPY pair could aim to reclaim the 157.00 round figure. The subsequent move-up could lift spot prices further to the 157.40-157.45 intermediate barrier en route to the 158.00 mark and the 158.85 region, or a multi-month top touched last week.
The Bank of Japan (BoJ) announces its interest rate decision after each of the Bank’s eight scheduled annual meetings. Generally, if the BoJ is hawkish about the inflationary outlook of the economy and raises interest rates it is bullish for the Japanese Yen (JPY). Likewise, if the BoJ has a dovish view on the Japanese economy and keeps interest rates unchanged, or cuts them, it is usually bearish for JPY.
Read more.Next release: Fri Jan 24, 2025 03:00
Frequency: Irregular
Consensus: -
Previous: 0.25%
Source: Bank of Japan
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