Japan's currency has fallen through every line of defense — record intervention, a rate hike to 1%, and repeated official warnings — yet the selloff keeps accelerating.
Japan's currency has fallen through every line of defense — record intervention, a rate hike to 1%, and repeated official warnings — yet the selloff keeps accelerating.

Japan's currency has fallen through every line of defense — record intervention, a rate hike to 1%, and repeated official warnings — yet the selloff keeps accelerating.
The yen slumped to 162.83 per dollar Wednesday, its weakest since 1986, as the chasm between Japan's ultra-low rates and the Federal Reserve's tightening bias overwhelmed a record ¥11.73 trillion intervention campaign.
"USD-JPY has moved into a new and higher range for external and domestic reasons," said Joey Chew, head of Asia FX research at HSBC Global Investment Research. "We still think MoF will intervene at some point."
The dollar bought as much as 162.83 yen in Asia trading, breaching the 161.95 level that triggered Japan's 2024 intervention, before settling at 162.77. The Bank of Japan raised its benchmark rate to 1% on June 16 — the highest since 1995 — but the move barely registered as traders priced in a Federal Reserve rate increase later this year. The interest-rate differential between US and Japanese 10-year government bonds stands at roughly 320 basis points, sustaining the carry trade that has driven the yen down 12% over the past 12 months.
Each leg lower raises the cost of Japan's energy imports — the country sources nearly all its oil from the Middle East — squeezing consumers and threatening Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's approval rating. The government has already spent ¥11.73 trillion ($72.15 billion) on yen purchases between April 28 and May 27, a record sum that provided only temporary relief. With $1.09 trillion in foreign-exchange reserves, including $162 billion in readily deployable deposits, the Ministry of Finance has the firepower for another round. The question is whether it can succeed where the last two campaigns failed.
Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama on Tuesday renewed her pledge to act, saying Japan and the US had confirmed that "taking decisive steps is included" as an option after her online meeting with Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent. "We will take appropriate action on currencies at any time as needed," she told a news conference in Tokyo. The verbal warnings have done little to slow the slide — the yen weakened even as Katayama spoke.
Rate Differentials Widen as BOJ, Fed Diverge
The structural forces arrayed against the yen are formidable. The BOJ's gradual approach to normalization — a single hike to 1% after ending negative rates in 2024 — contrasts sharply with a Federal Reserve that markets now expect to raise the federal-funds rate this year as inflation proves sticky. Investors borrow cheaply in yen and deploy the proceeds into higher-yielding dollar assets, a dynamic that has persisted through three rounds of Japanese intervention since 2022.
"The deposit base alone is sufficient for further intervention, but history shows authorities tend to sell or roll off securities to replenish deposits," said Chidu Narayanan, head of APAC macro strategy at Wells Fargo Macro Strategy. "The MoF has plenty of space to intervene again near-term, and in size."
Japan's last sustained intervention campaign, which ran from April 28 to May 27, drained ¥11.73 trillion from the reserves. The selloff resumed within weeks as risk appetite returned and Middle East tensions eased, mirroring the pattern of 2022 and 2024 when intervention provided only brief relief before the yen resumed its decline.
Fiscal Concerns Add to Yen Headwinds
Prime Minister Takaichi last month unveiled a plan targeting ¥370 trillion ($2.276 trillion) in combined public and private investment through the fiscal year ending March 2041. The funding sources remain unclear, raising questions about Japan's already strained public finances. "Fiscal concerns are coming to the fore again as the government considers various new expenditures and investments," HSBC's Chew and Mackel said.
The last time the yen traded at these levels was 1986, when Japan's asset bubble was still inflating and the currency was mid-way through a years-long rally following the Plaza Accord. This time, the slide reflects a generation of economic stagnation giving way to a fragile recovery — one that a persistently weak currency now threatens to undermine through higher import costs and squeezed household budgets.
For traders, the next trigger is whether the 162.83 level accelerates into a disorderly move that forces the Ministry of Finance to act before the BOJ's next scheduled meeting. If intervention comes, the history of the past three years suggests it will buy time, not change the trend — unless the rate gap with the US begins to close.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.