|

Japanese Yen trades in neutral zone as investors assess US PMIs and ADP data

  • USD/JPY remains subdued as investors assess the latest US PMI figures.
  • The preliminary June S&P Global PMI rose to 55.7, above the expected 54.8 figure, although softer employment details limited the bullish impact on the US Dollar.
  • Geopolitical risk remains in focus after the US granted Iran a 60-day Oil sanctions waiver, while conflicting comments over nuclear inspections kept markets cautious.

The USD/JPY pair is trading in a neutral zone on Tuesday as investors digest the latest United States (US) Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) figures and recent ADP employment data, awaiting a stronger catalyst from Federal Reserve (Fed) commentary.

The latest S&P Global US PMIs showed that business activity continued to expand, with the release at 55.7, higher than the expected 54.8 in June, offering some support to the US Dollar. However, softer employment details inside the survey limited the bullish impact as traders remain cautious over whether the US labor market is starting to lose momentum.

Monday's ADP Employment Change 4-Week Average data showed that US private payrolls rose by 30.75K, improving from the previous 26.5K reading. The figure suggested that hiring remained resilient and strong enough to significantly alter expectations for the Fed’s policy path.

Meanwhile, the latest US-Iran developments kept geopolitical risk in focus. The US granted Iran a 60-day Oil sanctions waiver following initial peace talks, while President Donald Trump claimed that Tehran had agreed to nuclear inspections “into infinity,” a statement Iran later denied.

Chart Analysis USD/JPY

Short-term technical analysis:

On the 4-hour chart, USD/JPY trades at 161.52, maintaining a bullish bias as it holds above both the 20-period Simple Moving Average (SMA) at 161.44 and the 100-period SMA at 160.40. The cluster of nearby supports suggests dips are being bought, while the Relative Strength Index (RSI) around 61 stays in positive territory, hinting that upside momentum remains constructive but shy of overbought extremes.

On the topside, immediate resistance is aligned at 161.74, where a clear break would expose further gains toward the recent all-time highs. On the downside, initial support is seen at the 20-period SMA near 161.44, reinforced by horizontal levels at 161.42, 161.35 and 161.27, with the 100-period SMA at 160.40 underpinning the broader bullish structure on deeper pullbacks.

(The technical analysis of this story was written with the help of an AI tool.)

Author

Agustin Wazne

Agustin Wazne joined FXStreet as a Junior News Editor, focusing on Commodities and covering Majors.

More from Agustin Wazne
Share:

Editor's Picks

GBP/USD slips back below 1.3200

GBP/USD remains well on the defensive, sliding to the sub-1.3200 area once again on Tuesday. Cable’s decline comes as investors assess the political uncertainty in the UK, coupled with softer-than-expected UK PMI data and the better tone in the Greenback.

EUR/USD breaks below 1.1400 to hit fresh 2026 lows

EUR/USD comes under fresh and strong selling pressure on Tuesday, slipping below 1.1400 to its weakest level since June 2025. Mixed PMIs readings from Germany and the Eurozone offered little support to the single currency, while a risk-off tone across markets and stronger-than-expected US data boosted demand for the US Dollar.

Gold drops to multi-day lows, focus is now on $4,000

Gold rapidly reverses Monday's bounce and is trading sharply lower on Tuesday. The yellow metal, however, manages well to keep business above the $4,100 mark per troy ounce despite a firmer US Dollar and expectations that the Fed will keep rates higher for longer.

MiCA regulations could be the next bullish catalyst for crypto – Georg Harer, co-CEO at Bybit EU

The cryptocurrency market is losing momentum and liquidity due to the lack of a bullish catalyst. In an exclusive interview with FXStreet, Georg Harer, co-CEO at Bybit EU, says that the Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulations could inject liquidity into the crypto market from traditional fund houses.

"Rearranging the deckchairs on the Titanic": UK's fiscal crisis outlasts another Prime Minister

Keir Starmer's resignation as the UK Prime Minister comes ten years after the Brexit referendum vote, a coincidence that financial markets have been quick to note. The British Pound trades around 1.3220 against the US Dollar on Thursday.

Regime change: Inside Kevin Warsh's first move to make the Fed unreadable on purpose

The rate did not move. That was the least interesting thing about Kevin Warsh's first meeting in charge of the Fed. The FOMC held its benchmark at 3.50%-3.75% for the fourth straight meeting, exactly as priced, and then the new chair used his first press conference to dismantle the machinery the market has leaned on for a decade.