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USD/JPY enters the intervention window

Softer payrolls data dents the dollar narrative, but it does not yet force a full repricing of the Fed. The market can still hold onto at least one hike going into the July 14 CPI release.

DXY may soften at the edges but is more likely to stabilise in the 100.0 to 101.5 range than begin a sustained collapse. The dollar has lost momentum, not its entire rate-support story.

EUR/USD lacks a convincing domestic bull case while markets question whether the ECB can deliver another hike. Rallies toward 1.1500 to 1.1530 may struggle without a more decisive US slowdown.

USD/JPY is the live risk point. Thin holiday liquidity, a possible initial intervention round and sharply lower one-week risk reversals leave the pair vulnerable to another fast, disorderly move lower.

Entering the intervention window

USD/JPY has moved from a rate-differential trade into a policy-risk trade.

The softer US jobs report was enough to knock some confidence out of the dollar, but not enough to rewrite the entire Fed story. Payrolls were weak in headline terms and revisions made the picture worse, yet the data did not collapse hard enough to force markets to abandon the idea of another hike. That leaves the dollar softer, but still supported enough to avoid a clean break lower across the board.

The more important development is the timing. US markets are shut, liquidity is thin, and Tokyo now has the kind of market backdrop it usually prefers: a stretched USD/JPY position, a softer dollar catalyst, and fewer players willing to stand in front of official action.

The first sharp move lower in USD/JPY before the payrolls release has naturally raised questions over whether Tokyo has already tested the market. Whether it was intervention or simply nervous positioning does not change the immediate setup. The market is now looking over its shoulder.

That is also showing up in options. Yen downside protection has become materially more expensive, signalling that traders are paying up for the risk of another sharp USD/JPY drop over the coming sessions. With holiday conditions likely to extend into Monday, any official move could travel further and faster than normal.

The dollar may stabilize rather than collapse from here. EUR/USD still lacks a clear domestic reason to run much higher, as the ECB-tightening story fades amid softer local inflation and DXY can hold together if markets continue to price in at least one more Fed move and the US AI exceptionalism trade holds together ahead of the July 14 CPI release.

But USD/JPY is different. It has become the pressure point where US data, Japanese policy frustration, and holiday liquidity all meet at once.

The key risk is not simply a lower USD/JPY print. It is a disorderly move lower that forces late dollar longs to exit into a thin market. Tokyo does not need to reverse the broader trend in one day. It only needs to remind the market that above 160, the carry trade comes with political risk attached.

For now, USD/JPY remains the clearest high-alert FX market. Dollar weakness may be gradual elsewhere, but in yen it can arrive all at once.

This fits my counter-trend call on June 30.

Author

Stephen Innes

Stephen Innes

SPI Asset Management

With more than 25 years of experience, Stephen has a deep-seated knowledge of G10 and Asian currency markets as well as precious metal and oil markets.

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