The dollar-yen pair has rallied for two straight months, reaching levels not seen since 1986, as macro divergence overrides falling commodity prices.
The dollar-yen pair has rallied for two straight months, reaching levels not seen since 1986, as macro divergence overrides falling commodity prices.

The dollar-yen pair has rallied for two straight months, reaching levels not seen since 1986, as macro divergence overrides falling commodity prices.
USD/JPY rose to near 162.50, extending a rally to its highest since 1986, as dollar strength persisted despite falling oil prices and waning risk appetite.
"The dollar continues to defy the typical commodity correlation because the primary driver is monetary policy divergence between the Fed and the Bank of Japan," said a currency strategist at a major Tokyo bank. "Markets are pricing in a delayed Fed easing cycle while the BoJ has signaled only gradual normalization, leaving the yield differential firmly in the dollar's favor."
The pair touched 162.78 last week, its strongest level in more than four decades, before pulling back slightly. Japan spent ¥11.7 trillion on yen-buying intervention efforts that failed to reverse the trend, underscoring the limits of unilateral currency action when macro fundamentals point in the opposite direction. The rally has persisted even as West Texas Intermediate crude declined over the same period, breaking the typical inverse correlation between a rising dollar and falling commodity prices.
Traders are now focused on the U.S. Non-Farm Payrolls report due this week as the next major catalyst. A strong print would reinforce expectations that the Federal Reserve will hold rates higher for longer, potentially pushing USD/JPY toward 165. A miss, however, could trigger the largest corrective move in months, given how heavily positioned the market is for continued yen weakness.
Intervention Fails to Halt Yen's Slide
Japan's Ministry of Finance confirmed intervention operations totaling ¥11.7 trillion, yet the dollar-yen pair continued its ascent. The ineffectiveness of intervention highlights a structural shift: as long as the U.S.-Japan interest rate differential remains wide, any yen strength from intervention is likely to be temporary. The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield has held above 4.2%, while Japan's 10-year yield remains capped near 1%, keeping the carry trade attractive for global investors.
NFP Data Looms as Next Catalyst
The July NFP release will provide the clearest signal yet on whether the U.S. labor market is cooling enough to justify rate cuts. Consensus estimates point to a moderation from prior months, but any upside surprise would validate the dollar's recent strength. The divergence between a resilient U.S. economy and a struggling Japanese economy — where growth remains tepid and inflation is only gradually picking up — continues to drive the pair's trajectory.
The sustained dollar rally has broader implications for global markets. Emerging market currencies face renewed pressure as the dollar strengthens, while commodity-exporting nations grapple with the dual headwind of a strong dollar and falling raw material prices. For Japan, a weaker yen boosts export competitiveness but raises import costs, squeezing households and small businesses already grappling with higher living expenses.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.