Bank of America Securities (BofA) has downgraded its end-2026 forecast for the US Dollar/Japanese Yen exchange rate to 152 from a previous estimate of 157. This change reflects an upgrade in BofA’s yen view to neutral from bearish, citing improving structural flow dynamics despite ongoing softness towards the USD/JPY level of 160 per dollar.
The shift is significant as it comes from one of the market’s prominent yen bears and signals a meaningful adjustment in stance. According to their research note, BofA identified three specific catalysts that could push them into an outright bullish position:
Catalysts for Yen Bull Turn
- USD/JPY at 160: A move towards this level would likely prompt decisive intervention from Japanese authorities, with suspected operations of up to ¥10 trillion already taking place between late April and early May.
- 3% JGB Yield: This represents a fundamental repricing of interest rates in Japan that could attract sustained capital inflows supportive of the yen.
- Brent Oil Below $90: A reduction below this level would significantly lower Japan’s energy import costs, one of the persistent drags on its current account balance.
These conditions are seen as critical thresholds for a shift towards structural support for the Japanese yen. Additionally, BofA highlights improving domestic fundamentals such as narrowing bank loan-deposit gaps and rising real interest rates in Japan, which could encourage capital to flow back into yen-denominated assets over time.
Despite these positive developments, BofA acknowledges that rate differentials remain a significant headwind for the Japanese currency. However, they now see credible support at 160 USD/JPY due to intervention risks and an increasingly active Bank of Japan (BOJ).
This upgrade from bearish to neutral by one of the market’s leading yen analysts will likely be closely watched by traders positioned for further weakness in the Japanese currency.
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