The Japanese Yen (JPY) remains on the front foot against a broadly weaker US Dollar (USD) for the second consecutive day on Tuesday and seems poised to appreciate further. Japan’s Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama’s stronger intervention language turns out to be a key factor that provides a goodish lift to the JPY amid the year-end thin liquidity. Moreover, rising geopolitical tensions contribute to driving safe-haven flows toward the JPY.
The aforementioned factors, to a larger extent, offset concerns about Japan’s worsening fiscal conditions and a positive risk tone, which does little to dent demand for the safe-haven JPY. The USD, on the other hand, drops to a one-week low in the wake of US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent’s comments on Monday. This contributes to the USD/JPY pair’s slide below mid-156.00s during the Asian session and backs the case for a further depreciating move.
This week’s failure near the 158.00 neighborhood constitutes the formation of a bearish double-top pattern. Moreover, an intraday breakdown below the 38.2% Fibonacci retracement level of last week’s move higher favors the USD/JPY bears and backs the case for further losses. Short-term moving averages have flattened after the recent setback, tempering upside traction.
The Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) line slips below the signal line with both hovering around the zero mark, and the histogram turns negative, suggesting fading bullish momentum. The RSI sits at 47.40 (neutral) after retreating from overbought. Measured from the 154.39 low to the 157.71 high, the 50% retracement at 156.05 offers nearby support. A hold above the latter could keep the pullback contained.
Moving averages would need to reassert a positive slope to restore bullish momentum, otherwise the pair risks further consolidation. Should weakness extend, the MACD’s negative histogram would likely widen, and the RSI could slip toward 40, reinforcing a softer tone. Measured from the 154.39 low to the 157.71 high, a break under the 50% retracement at 156.05 would expose the 61.8% retracement at 155.66. Conversely, a recovery through 156.44 could open room toward the 23.6% retracement at 156.93.
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