Yen slides to a one-month low on BOJ liquidity injection

The Bank of Japan's monetary policy imperfections lead to inevitable capital outflows. Every time the Fed and ECB raise the rate, the Bank of Japan is forced to buy Japanese bonds. The story of how this affects the Japanese yen rate is explained in the article by OctaFX experts.
OctaFX | 680 days ago

The Japanese debt market has been under severe stress for the past year and a half. The reason is outside Japan: every time the Fed or ECB raises rates, Japanese government bond (JGB) yields are no longer attractive, and there is a massive sell-off on the interest rate differential between the yen, dollar, and euro. The process is followed by a rise in JGB yields and a sharp strengthening of the Japanese yen. To avoid collapse, the Japanese central bank starts buying bonds and flooding the economy with money—and the yen weakens again.

'The Bank of Japan is being forced to buy back its bonds: currently, over 50% of Japan's public debt is held by its central bank, a share that could rise to 60% by the end of 2023', said Kar Yong Ang, the OctaFX financial market analyst.

A striking example occurred on December 20, 2022, when the administration of the Bank of Japan decided to slightly relax the control of the yield curve, raising the allowed yield for 10-year bonds to 0.5%. By comparison, the rate on similar U.S. bonds is 3% higher. Almost instantly, investors began a rapid sell-off of Japanese bonds. Their real rate jumped to 0.47%, the highest since 2015, and the key indices of the national stock market collapsed by 3%. To keep the debt market from falling further, the Bank of Japan systematically bought government bonds for several days—yields stabilised, and the yen weakened.

Another case occurred on July 26, 2023, when the U.S. Federal Reserve raised rates by 25 basis points—and the yield on 10-year U.S. Treasuries rose to 4.2%. The next day, the 10-year JGB yield rose from 0.4% to 0.65%, and the Japanese yen experienced a one-step solid rise. It was too late to do anything on that day, but at the beginning of the next trading session on July 28, the Bank of Japan started buying the sagging bonds back and repeated this procedure on July 31. On the buying wave, USDJPY rose steadily for three trading days, eventually adding 6 yen and getting to 143.80.

Сomparison of USDJPY and ten-year Japanese government bonds (source: Tradingview)

'We saw the Bank of Japan increasing the amount of money to keep bonds from collapsing, which provided an opportunity to capitalise on the weakness of the Japanese yen for at least two trading sessions,’ said Kar Yong Ang, the OctaFX financial market analyst.

Meanwhile, the BOJ will continue to buy JGBs on an ad hoc basis every time risks increase in the U.S. In such a situation, investors should remember that after the yield gap between the U.S. and Japan becomes wide, the BOJ will most likely start buying government bonds, thus forcing USDJPY to rise on a predictable time horizon.

 

Regulation: CySEC (Cyprus), FSCA (South Africa)
read more
Rate Shifts Steer FX Markets as Silver Holds Strong

Rate Shifts Steer FX Markets as Silver Holds Strong

On July 3, silver stays firm above $35.40 as Fed cut bets persist. EUR/USD holds near 1.1800, while GBP/USD lingers near 1.3585 ahead of UK jobs data. JPY strengthens after BoJ signals a hawkish pause. AUD/USD slips on weak trade surplus. Focus turns to US NFP and ISM data for market direction before the US holiday break.
Moneta Markets | 9h 54min ago
ATFX Market Outlook 3rd July 2025

ATFX Market Outlook 3rd July 2025

Wednesday’s ADP report showed a surprise decline of 33,000 private-sector jobs in June, marking the first contraction since March 2023 as economic uncertainty weighed on hiring. U.S. equities surged, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq closing at record highs, driven by gains in tech stocks and relief following the U.S.–Vietnam trade agreement, which eased concerns over prolonged trade tensions
ATFX | 13h 23min ago
Dollar Rebounds, Risk FX Holds Strong | 2nd July, 2025

Dollar Rebounds, Risk FX Holds Strong | 2nd July, 2025

On July 2, the USD stabilizes as Fed rate cut bets build. GBP/USD nears 1.3750 highs, NZD/USD extends above 0.6120, and AUD/USD holds near 0.6820 despite soft retail sales. USD/JPY recovers to 146.20, while silver dips below $36. Markets await US labor data and Fed remarks for direction ahead of July 4.
Moneta Markets | 1 day ago
ATFX Market Outlook 2nd July 2025

ATFX Market Outlook 2nd July 2025

Fed Chairman Powell emphasised the need for more data before considering interest rate cuts, with a July cut still a possibility. On Tuesday, the Nasdaq and S&P 500 closed lower due to weakness in large tech stocks, with the Nasdaq down 0.82% and the S&P 500 down 0.11%. In contrast, the Dow rose by 0.91% amid volatile trading and low liquidity.
ATFX | 1 day ago
WTI Slides as Geopolitical Risks Ease | 1st July, 2025

WTI Slides as Geopolitical Risks Ease | 1st July, 2025

WTI dips below $64.50 as Middle East tensions ease, dampening supply fears. Silver struggles under $36, while AUD and NZD stay muted on weak China PMI. USD/JPY steadies near 145.90, and the yen holds gains on USD weakness. Traders now eye US ISM PMI and Fed minutes for clues on policy and market direction.
Moneta Markets | 2 days ago
US500, EURUSD, USDJPY

US500, EURUSD, USDJPY

New record high for US 500 amid relief rally; Eurozone preliminary CPI to be within ECB’s target; EURUSD hits 4-year high; US NFP report the highlight of the week; USDJPY eases
XM Group | 3 days ago
Oil Rises, Dollar Stalls as Risk Appetite Builds | 27th June, 2025

Oil Rises, Dollar Stalls as Risk Appetite Builds | 27th June, 2025

WTI crude nears $75 on strong US inventory draw, boosting risk sentiment. The US Dollar remains weak amid Fed independence fears, lifting AUD/USD to 0.6880 and EUR/USD near 1.1700. USD/JPY retreats while USD/CNY stays steady on a firmer PBOC fix. Focus shifts to US PCE data and global central bank commentary.
Moneta Markets | 6 days ago
ATFX Market Outlook 25th June 2025

ATFX Market Outlook 25th June 2025

Under pressure from U.S. President Trump, the fragile ceasefire agreement between Israel and Iran took effect on Tuesday. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell told lawmakers that tariff increases this summer could begin to push inflation higher, marking a critical period for the Fed’s consideration of rate cuts.
ATFX | 8 days ago