CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 77% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.
CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 77% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.

Japanese Yen Forecast: USD/JPY Eyes Bullish Break as Risk Sentiment Takes Charge

Article By: ,  Market Analyst
  • USD/JPY on cusp of bullish breakout as Japan’s fiscal year-end approaches
  • Rate differentials losing influence, with risk sentiment now driving price action
  • PCE report is the U.S. data highlight, but surprises are rare
  • Japanese CPI now a key focus for the BOJ’s inflation outlook
  • Treasury auctions and Fed speeches may impact market dynamics

Summary

USD/JPY is on the cusp of a bullish breakout as the final full week of Japan’s fiscal year begins, pressing against downtrend resistance dating back to the January highs. With its relationship to interest rate differentials weakening over the past fortnight, it may be left up to price action and risk sentiment to determine whether the yen sinks or swims into quarter-end.

Big Event Risk Arrives Late

Known event risk is limited and skewed toward the latter part of the week, meaning the market reaction may not follow traditional fundamentals given the proximity to quarter-end where window dressing can drive unusual price action. This effect is even more pronounced as it coincides with Japan’s fiscal year-end.

Events to watch have been colour-coded based on their likelihood of sparking volatility, with red marking those most likely to provide trade entry and exit points, and yellow signalling those that could still generate a decent market move.

Source: Refinitiv

In the United States, Friday’s PCE report is the clear highlight. However, despite containing the Fed’s preferred underlying inflation gauge—the core PCE deflator—economists’ mapping techniques using data from other inflation reports have improved to the point that it rarely delivers a major surprise. That means if an unexpected outcome does emerge, it will almost certainly trigger a sizeable market reaction.

In the absence of such an outcome, focus will shift to the separate income and expenditure data within the release. With concerns about a potential U.S. economic slowdown still unresolved, any signs of weakness could easily reignite the fears seen earlier in the month.

Beyond PCE, inflation, labour market, and leading indicators in the flash PMIs, consumer confidence, and jobless claims reports could also drive volatility, particularly if they point to renewed softness.

For Japan, key releases include Wednesday’s services producer price inflation report and Friday’s Tokyo CPI print for March. The latter—published three weeks before the national CPI—is arguably Japan’s most important economic release right now given the BOJ is looking for signs that stronger wage growth is filtering into broader inflation trends. While the BOJ cites core CPI (excluding fresh food) as its preferred inflation measure, markets are more sensitive to core-core CPI, which also excludes energy prices.

Source: Refinitiv

With a light economic calendar in both the U.S. and Japan, Fed speakers may attract more attention, though their impact could be limited given the lack of fresh economic data and uncertainty surrounding potential changes to Trump administration trade policies slated for April 2.

Similarly, the minutes from the BOJ’s January meeting—when rates were raised by 25bps to 0.5%—seem unlikely to offer much new insight when released on Tuesday. There may be more interest in the summary of opinions from the BOJ’s March meeting on Thursday, though even that could struggle for relevance given the uncertain outlook.

Source: TradingView

Treasury auctions of two, five, and seven-year notes on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, respectively, warrant attention, as they have influenced U.S. interest rates in the past depending on the underlying details. This primer explains what you should be watching for. 

Yen Weakens and Risk Appetite Rises

Source: TradingView

A major shift USD/JPY traders need to be aware of is the weakening of its previously strong relationship with interest rate differentials between the United States and Japan over the past fortnight. Correlation coefficients in the black box above have disintegrated compared to earlier in the year. Instead, rather than being a play on rate differentials, USD/JPY is now behaving more as a proxy for investor risk sentiment, as seen in the red box by the strengthening of its relationship with Nasdaq 100 futures and S&P 500 volatility index (VIX). As stocks have risen and volatility has subsided over the past week, USD/JPY has rebounded, suggesting the performance of riskier asset classes this week may influence directional risks for the yen.

USD/JPY Eyes Bullish Breakout

Source: TradingView

The downside break of the rising wedge didn’t last long last week, with dip-buyers stepping in again as USD/JPY slid below 148.65. The hammer candle printed on Thursday was followed by a strong rally on Friday, forming a three-candle morning star pattern that suggests downtrend resistance dating back to the January highs may come under significant threat early in the week—especially if risk appetite improves.

USD/JPY was rejected again at the downtrend on Friday, but with momentum indicators like RSI (14) and MACD still flashing bullish signals, the setup remains in place for a breakout. A clean break above the downtrend would put 151.00 in focus for bulls, with the 50-day and 200-day moving averages, along with 152.43 and 153.38, other levels of note.

Alternatively, if the downtrend continues to cap rallies, a pullback toward 148.65 or even 147.10 is possible. While the 50-day moving average appears set to cross below the 200-day—forming a death cross—recent history suggests this alone doesn’t guarantee a sustained downside move. It’s a signal worth noting, but not one to act upon without clear bearish price confirmation.

-- Written by David Scutt

Follow David on Twitter @scutty

 

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