Abstract:Despite the Bank of Japan’s (BOJ) attempts to normalize policy, the Japanese Yen faces a grim trajectory, with major institutions including JPMorgan and BNP Paribas forecasting a slide to 160 or lower against the Dollar by late 2026. The consensus is shifting from cyclical weakness to a narrative of "structural decline."

Despite the Bank of Japans (BOJ) attempts to normalize policy, the Japanese Yen faces a grim trajectory, with major institutions including JPMorgan and BNP Paribas forecasting a slide to 160 or lower against the Dollar by late 2026. The consensus is shifting from cyclical weakness to a narrative of “structural decline.”
The core driver of yen weakness has evolved beyond simple interest rate differentials.
Strategists note that while the BOJ is tightening, the pace is glacial compared to global peers. With real interest rates deeply negative and the “carry trade” finding new life involving high-yield EM currencies like the Brazilian Real, the yen remains a funding currency of choice.
Unless the Fed cuts rates far more aggressively than currently priced, or the BOJ shocks markets with rapid tightening, the path of least resistance for USD/JPY remains higher, with 165 cited as a potential extreme by late 2026.

Currency markets opened the week with diverging narratives as the Japanese Yen (JPY) found footing on policy signals, while the Euro (EUR) struggles to price in the efficacy of German fiscal maneuvering amidst looming trade war threats.

The Bank of Japan (BOJ) has signaled a decisive shift away from its ultra-loose monetary past, with December meeting minutes revealing a policy board far more hawkish than market consensus anticipated. This development sets the stage for a high-stakes clash between monetary tightening and the government's massive fiscal expansion.

Japan’s currency is facing renewed selling pressure as Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s government unveils a record-breaking fiscal package, effectively neutralizing the market impact of the Bank of Japan’s (BOJ) historic pivot away from ultra-loose monetary policy.

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.