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  • USD/JPY rises as the Japanese Yen falls amid high import costs.
  • 10-year JGB yield reaches a fresh 30-year high of 2.79%.
  • The US Dollar remains strong as markets price in multiple Fed rate hikes this year.

USD/JPY extends its gains for the second successive day, trading around 161.70 during the Asian hours on Monday. The Japanese Yen (JPY) is caught in a high-stakes tug-of-war, buckling under surging import costs even as 10-year JGB yields hit a fresh 30-year high of 2.79%. This deep market divide has traders on high alert for immediate verbal intervention from Tokyo.

The USD/JPY pair appreciates as the US Dollar (USD) holds its ground, buoyed by market expectations of multiple Federal Reserve (Fed) rate hikes later this year. This comes despite easing global inflation concerns, which have been helped by oil flows normalizing through the critical Strait of Hormuz.

The CME FedWatch tool shows financial markets are pricing in a 77.3% chance of interest rate hikes by year-end. Investors are now looking ahead to Wednesday’s release of the Fedโ€™s June policy Meeting Minutes to gain clearer insights into the future path of interest rates.

Recent US labor data have forced Wall Street to aggressively rethink this hawkish outlook. The latest Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) report revealed the US economy added a mere 57,000 jobs last month, severely missing the market’s forecast of 110,000. While the headline unemployment rate did manage an unexpected drop to 4.2% from May’s 4.3%, the dramatic hiring slowdown strongly signals that the broader economy is cooling down.

Fed Chair Kevin Warsh firmly reaffirmed the central bankโ€™s independent commitment to its 2% price stability target. Notably, he also acknowledged that inflation risks and expectations have finally begun to moderate over the past month.

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