The yen's slide past 162 per dollar has revived intervention risk after Japan spent $74 billion defending the currency in May.
The yen's slide past 162 per dollar has revived intervention risk after Japan spent $74 billion defending the currency in May.

The yen weakened past 162 per dollar for the first time in 40 years on Wednesday, breaching the 161.95 resistance level as traders tested the Bank of Japan's resolve to intervene after a $74 billion operation in May.
"Judging from how the market moved afterward, I think it clearly had meaning," Atsushi Mimura, vice finance minister for international affairs, told Bloomberg News, referring to the intervention. Mimura said US officials had been "supportive" of the move.
USD/JPY edged as high as 162.85 during the session, extending gains after clearing the 161.95 zone. The dollar index held at 101.30 ahead of the ECB's Sintra conference, where new Federal Reserve Chair Warsh is scheduled to speak.
The break past 162 raises the stakes for Japanese authorities, who face a fundamental challenge: as long as the Fed keeps rates elevated, the yen's yield disadvantage persists. The next BOJ policy decision is July 31, with markets watching for any shift in language on the pace of normalization.
The yen's decline accelerated after USD/JPY pushed through the 161.95 resistance level that had held for several sessions, triggering stop-loss buying and momentum-driven flows. Japan's previous intervention in May temporarily stabilized the currency, but the effect has faded as the interest rate gap between the US and Japan remains wide.
Mimura's comments were the strongest indication yet that Tokyo views the intervention as successful, even as the yen trades weaker than before the May operation. He said he was unaware of any US objections, pushing back against speculation that Washington had opposed the move.
Rate Differentials Drive the Slide
The fundamental driver of yen weakness remains the yield gap. The BOJ raised rates to 0.25% in March — its first hike in 17 years — but Japanese government bonds still yield a fraction of US Treasuries, where the 10-year sits above 4.3%. Carry traders have exploited this gap, borrowing yen to fund purchases of higher-yielding dollar assets.
The Sintra conference this week adds another layer of uncertainty. Warsh's first major public appearance as Fed chair will be scrutinized for any signal on the rate path, particularly after recent data showed sticky inflation. A hawkish tone could push USD/JPY toward 165, a level some analysts see as the trigger for BOJ intervention.
What Comes Next
Traders are watching for signs of intervention in the coming days. Japan's Ministry of Finance typically acts when moves become disorderly rather than defending specific levels, but the speed of the break above 162 may accelerate the timeline. Options markets show increased demand for yen calls, suggesting some traders are hedging against a sudden reversal.
The BOJ's July 31 meeting is the next scheduled policy event, though intervention can occur at any time. If the central bank combines rate hikes with reduced bond purchases, it could provide more durable support for the yen than sporadic intervention alone.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.