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Traders are gaming out a snap election, fiscal stimulus, and an Abenomics reboot. The yen’s slide looks home grown, raising two big questions: does Tokyo really want a stronger currency—and would BOJ intervention even work?
- Yen weakness largely reflects domestic politics and fiscal stimulus expectations
- Steeper JGB curves highlight market bets on Abenomics-style reflation
- Past interventions followed rapid moves, not particular levels
- Intervention would counter Tokyo’s inflation and growth goals,
Summary
Speculation over yen intervention is heating up again as USD/JPY creeps back toward the same danger zone that triggered action in 2024. But this time feels different. Back then, ballooning rate differentials between the U.S. and Japan were the villain. Now, the yen’s slide looks home grown, tied to domestic politics and policy expectations rather than global carry dynamics.
Talk of a snap lower house election in Japan later this month has added fuel, with traders gaming out a landslide win for Prime Minister Sanae Takaishi and the prospect of aggressive fiscal stimulus. That has reignited chatter about an Abenomics 2.0 reboot, sending both the yen and JGBs, especially the long end, lower in tandem. The correlation between USD/JPY and the Japanese 2s10s curve has spiked, reflecting bets that reflationary policies could be back in vogue.
Against that backdrop, the question is not just whether intervention would work beyond a short-term jolt. It is whether Tokyo even wants a stronger yen if the goal is to turbocharge growth and inflation.
Prior Intervention Episodes: A Quick Primer

Source: TradingView
The first chart provides context as to what happened prior to recent intervention episodes. It plots USD/JPY with markers showing how far the pair ran beforehand. The contrast is stark. Ahead of the 2024 action above 160, USD/JPY surged almost 10% in a matter of weeks, with later episode following a move of nearly 5%. Compare that to now: barely 3% so far. It is a tiddler, which raises the question of whether the move is big enough to force the Ministry of Finance’s hand.
History from 2022 reinforces the point. Those interventions came after rapid run-ups of 12% and 8%, respectively, measured in weeks not months. If speed matters more than absolute levels, as recent MoF behaviour suggests, it may require a quick extension into the low 160s to trigger action.
We have heard plenty of jawboning from Japanese government officials lately, but most of it repeats the same lines: rapid one-sided moves are undesirable, and price should reflect fundamentals. Nothing yet screams imminent intervention if history is any guide. Expect one more round of forceful language before any real move occurs.
That brings us to the bigger question: even if the BOJ is asked to act, would it work? The yen’s latest slide looks home grown, driven by domestic politics and reflation bets rather than global rate differentials. That makes any intervention a ultra short-term shock at best, not a trend changer in my opinion.
Domestic Drivers: JGBs and Steeper Curves
The next two charts speak volumes. The first shows Japanese government bond yields across 2-year, 5-year, 10-year, 20-year, 30-year and 40-year tenors over the past six months. Every line is pointing higher, led by the back end as term premium ratchets up. Traders are positioning for heavier fiscal outlays to spur growth alongside wage and inflation pressures.
Source: TradingView
The second chart adds to the story. Both the 2s10s (LHS) and 2s30s (RHS) curves have steepened dramatically on Abenomics 2.0 speculation. 2s10s sits at 102 basis points, the widest since 2011. 2s30s is at 234 basis points, the most since 2004. These figures are simply the differential between short and longer-dated Japanese government bond yields. These moves underline growing concern about Japan’s already record sovereign debt burden. Prior reflationary pushes have delivered little lasting success, adding to an already ballooning debt to GDP ratio rather than fixing the structural challenge.
Source: TradingView
It all drives home one point: domestic politics is exerting a major influence on Japanese borrowing costs. And as the next section shows, that same dynamic looks central to the yen’s latest slide.
A Home-Grown Yen Slide

Source: TradingView
The chart above makes the point crystal clear. On the left, you see USD/JPY in black overlaid against US–Japan 10-year yield differentials in grey. That relationship used to be the anchor for dollar-yen moves, reflecting classic carry trade dynamics. Not anymore. It fell apart around the time of the Liberation Day tariff announcement in early April last year. Yield differentials have narrowed sharply while USD/JPY has surged, and there is no sign of the old link returning.
The middle and right panes drive it home. They show rolling correlation scores between USD/JPY and a range of mostly rates-linked variables. For decades, yield spreads dominated. Now, the correlation with those differentials has flipped negative, sitting at -0.68 over the past month and -0.7 over the past quarter. Eroding US yield advantage has done nothing to boost the yen’s appeal.
Look further down the list and one thing jumps out. Correlations with Japanese long-dated yields and the shape of the 2s10s curve have surged, sitting at 0.77 and 0.8 over the past month and 0.8 and 0.87 over the past quarter. Correlation does not equal causation, but the message is clear. The yen’s slide is being driven largely by domestic factors, with buoyant risk appetite adding further support.
Intervention: A Contradiction in Policy?
All of this sets up a contradiction. The government may be talking tough on yen weakness, but the evidence suggests its own policies—and speculation about what comes next—are driving the move. If the goal is reflation, does Tokyo really want a stronger yen? Probably not. That makes any intervention look more like a token gesture to slow the pace rather than reverse the trend.
If it happens, expect timing to be tactical. Thin liquidity offers maximum impact for minimal outlay, so the changeover between North American and Asian sessions is prime territory. With the MLK holiday coming up in the States next Monday, that window looks even more tempting.
Weekly Chart Signals

Source: TradingView
Turning to the weekly USD/JPY chart, which in my view gives the cleanest read for traders, there is not much to dislike right now. The pair sits in a clear uptrend after breaking above the influential 50-week moving average in October, attracting bids on each of the last few tests. It has also reclaimed 158.76, a level that acted as both support and resistance in prior years, most recently in early 2025. With that back in play, it may now serve as a base for fresh longs, with the multi-decade high of 161.95 the obvious target for bulls even with the risk of intervention.
Momentum indicators echo the bullish tone. RSI (14) has edged into overbought territory but continues to set higher highs despite caution creeping in. MACD tells a similar story, still pushing higher even if the slope has flattened slightly. The message favours upside, but with one very large caveat: it will mean nothing if the BoJ is prompted to act.
If intervention does occur, a slide toward 154.45, 153.00 or even 150.90 is possible, though a move beyond the latter looks unlikely without a major fundamental shock accompanying it. Escalating Fed independence concerns, a worst case Supreme Court ruling that blocks reciprocal tariff collection and forces refunds of prior revenues, or a significant geopolitical left-tail event all screen as catalysts that could deliver such an outcome.
