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Japanese Yen: BNY Flags Further BOJ Rate Hike Potential as Hawkish Signals Mount
The Japanese yen may have more room to strengthen as the Bank of Japan (BOJ) signals increasing willingness to raise interest rates further, according to a new analysis from Bank of New York Mellon (BNY). The assessment, published on [date of article], highlights a shift in BOJ communication that markets may be underestimating.
BNY strategists point to recent remarks from BOJ officials suggesting that the central bank is preparing for a more aggressive normalization of monetary policy than previously anticipated. While the BOJ has maintained ultra-low rates for years, the tide appears to be turning. The bank’s December 2024 policy meeting minutes, released earlier this month, revealed a board increasingly focused on the risk of sustained inflation above the 2% target, driven by rising wages and services prices.
“The BOJ is signaling that the next rate hike could come sooner than the market is pricing,” wrote BNY’s head of FX strategy in a note to clients. “This creates a clear tailwind for the yen, especially against the U.S. dollar, where the Federal Reserve is expected to cut rates.”
The yen has already appreciated roughly 8% against the dollar since early January, breaking below the 145 level for the first time since mid-2024. BNY’s analysis suggests further gains could push USD/JPY toward the 138–140 range in the coming months if the BOJ follows through with a rate hike at its April or June meeting.
The divergence between BOJ tightening and Fed easing is a key driver. While U.S. inflation has cooled enough to allow the Fed to begin cutting rates as early as May, Japan’s core inflation remains stubbornly above target, giving the BOJ cover to hike. This interest rate differential narrowing is historically bullish for the yen.
For Japanese importers, a stronger yen reduces the cost of energy and raw materials, potentially easing corporate margin pressure. For global forex traders, the yen’s carry trade appeal diminishes as Japanese rates rise, which could trigger a broader unwind of short-yen positions. BNY warns that such a move could be abrupt, given the high level of speculative short positioning in yen futures.
The BNY analysis adds to a growing consensus that the yen’s rally has further to run. While the BOJ has not committed to a specific timeline, its increasingly hawkish language — combined with solid domestic inflation data — suggests the next rate hike is a matter of when, not if. Traders and businesses exposed to yen volatility should prepare for continued appreciation pressure in the near term.
Q1: Why is BNY Mellon predicting more yen strength?
BNY analysts cite the Bank of Japan’s increasingly hawkish signals, including board members’ comments about the need for further rate hikes to combat persistent inflation. They believe markets are underpricing the likelihood of a move in the coming months.
Q2: How high could the yen go against the dollar?
BNY’s base case sees USD/JPY falling to the 138–140 range if the BOJ hikes rates by 25 basis points at its April or June meeting. A more aggressive 50-basis-point hike could push the pair toward 135.
Q3: What is the main risk to this outlook?
The primary risk is that the BOJ delays action due to global economic uncertainty or a sudden drop in Japanese inflation. Additionally, if the Fed surprises by holding rates steady, the dollar could regain strength against the yen, limiting further yen appreciation.
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