Abstract:The Japanese Yen remains trapped in a complex policy tug-of-war as the government unveils record-breaking fiscal spending plans, potentially undermining the Bank of Japan's (BOJ) efforts to normalize monetary policy. While USD/JPY hovers near 156.00, the divergence between fiscal expansion and monetary tightening suggests volatility ahead for 2026.

The Japanese Yen remains trapped in a complex policy tug-of-war as the government unveils record-breaking fiscal spending plans, potentially undermining the Bank of Japan's (BOJ) efforts to normalize monetary policy. While USD/JPY hovers near 156.00, the divergence between fiscal expansion and monetary tightening suggests volatility ahead for 2026.
Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's government has announced a record initial budget of 122.3 trillion yen ($786 billion) for the fiscal year starting April 2026, marking a 6.3% increase from the previous year. This expansionary stance, driven by ballooning social security costs and defense spending, comes just as the BOJ attempts to pivot away from decades of ultra-loose monetary policy.
The contradiction is stark: The BOJ is slowly hiking rates (recently touching 0.75%) to curb inflation and support the Yen, while the government pumps liquidity into the economy.
For Forex traders, the immediate focus remains the psychological and technical barrier at 160.00. Despite the BOJ's hawkish shift, the Yen has failed to stage a convincing recovery, largely due to the “carry trade” appeal of the USD and doubts over the BOJ's resolve to hike aggressively amidst weak GDP growth (Q3 annualized GDP contracted 2.3%).
Market Outlook: If US yields remain elevated due to “America First” tariffs and fiscal policies under the Trump administration, the widening fiscal gap in Japan could push USD/JPY back toward the intervention danger zone of 160.00-162.00. Conversely, a clear signal from the BOJ regarding a move to a neutral rate of 1.00% is required to break the current deadlock.

The Bank of Japan (BOJ) is facing a critical credibility test as bond markets signal that the central bank is dangerously behind the inflation curve.

New fiscal proposals and hawkish central bank rhetoric are reshaping the outlook for the Japanese Yen, as the government unveils a record-breaking budget while the Bank of Japan (BoJ) hints at accelerated monetary tightening.

Barriers in Asian currency markets are shifting as Japan embraces monetary normalization and China navigates a complex valuation recovery.

It has been a bearish year for the US dollar, but the biggest surprise has been the USD/JPY pair for me in the FX space. By Christmas eve, the Dollar Index (DXY) was down 9.6% year-to-date, trading around 98.00, its weakest level since 2022.