USD/JPY nears 160 as oil shock traps the BOJ

The Hormuz blockade has placed the Bank of Japan in one of its sharpest policy binds in recent memory. The same energy shock that is strengthening the dollar and pushing USD/JPY toward 160 is also stoking the inflation that may compel the BOJ to raise rates — yet tightening into a growth shock carries its own risks for an economy heavily reliant on fuel imports.
USD/JPY traded around 159.30 on Monday, near the top of its 52‑week range just below the 160.00 level. The dollar extended its recent gains against a basket of peers as Washington moved ahead with plans for a naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, helping to drive crude oil back above 100 dollars a barrel and lifting safe‑haven demand for the greenback.
The inflation trap
Japan's wholesale price data, released on 10 April, laid bare the scale of the problem facing policymakers. The corporate goods price index rose more than expected in March, accelerating from February’s pace and underscoring persistent wholesale price pressures. Yen‑based import prices also jumped sharply from a month earlier, as higher energy, metals, and chemical costs broadened across the economy.
The data arrived days before the blockade was confirmed. With Brent now trading back above 100 dollars a barrel, analysts expect those import cost pressures to deepen further in April. Japan imports the vast majority of its energy needs and has no domestic oil production of significance, leaving its economy unusually exposed to supply disruptions in the Persian Gulf.
BOJ Deputy Governor Ryozo Himino told parliament last Friday that Japan was not in stagflation, while warning that a prolonged Middle East shock pushing prices up and growth down would pose a ‘dilemma and difficult problem’. If the Middle East conflict persists and simultaneously pushes inflation higher while weighing on growth, he said, it "would pose a dilemma and difficult problem." That careful framing from a senior central bank official was widely read by markets as a signal that the April 27-28 meeting remains live.
Rate hike odds and the 60% question
By 10 April, markets were already pricing in around a 60% probability of a BOJ rate hike at the April meeting, even before the latest escalation in the Hormuz crisis. The five-year Japanese government bond yield touched a record high on 10 April, reflecting expectations that tightening could come sooner than previously anticipated.
The BOJ held its policy rate at 0.75% at the March meeting in an 8–1 vote. At an earlier meeting in January, board member Hajime Takata had already dissented in favour of raising the policy rate to 1.0%, underscoring his push for a faster pace of tightening. His position was notable: even before the latest escalation, one BOJ member judged that the balance of risks warranted faster action. In a recent interview, former BOJ board member Seiji Adachi said he sees the central bank as more likely to raise rates in April, once it has a fuller set of inflation data.
Japan’s trade minister said on 12 April that BOJ policy to ‘boost the yen could be an option’ to curb inflation, a remark investors read as softening official resistance to using tighter monetary policy as a currency‑defence tool.
The 160 threshold and intervention risk
The 160 level carries particular weight. The pair has approached this area during past episodes of yen weakness that prompted intervention by Japanese authorities, reinforcing 160.00 as a level traders watch closely. At 159.30, USD/JPY sits close enough to that zone for traders to factor intervention risk into positioning.
Analysts at major global banks have warned that persistently wide US–Japan yield differentials, negative real rates in Japan, and structural capital outflows could keep upward pressure on USD/JPY and make a test of the 160 area over time hard to rule out. With the Fed funds rate still well above 3.5% and the BOJ at 0.75%, that yield gap remains one of the widest among major economies — a structural anchor keeping yen weakness in place even if the BOJ delivers one or two additional hikes.
There is a further technical dynamic. Some strategists argue that episodes of Brent trading above 100 dollars a barrel tend to be broadly supportive for USD/JPY, given Japan’s heavy reliance on imported energy. The return of oil to triple digits may therefore act as a floor for the pair in the near term, regardless of what the BOJ signals.
Consumer confidence and the growth risk
The case for caution at the BOJ is not without substance. Consumer confidence in Japan deteriorated noticeably in March, according to government survey data, highlighting the strain that higher fuel costs are placing on households. Soaring fuel costs are squeezing household purchasing power, while corporate margins face pressure from rising input costs that cannot fully be passed on.
This is the dilemma in its starkest form. Hiking rates to fight inflation and defend the yen could raise borrowing costs on an economy already under strain from the energy shock. Holding rates could allow yen weakness to compound, driving import prices still higher and adding to the very inflation the BOJ is trying to contain.
What traders are watching
The April 27-28 meeting is the primary near-term catalyst. BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda's pre-meeting communications will be closely monitored — analysts have drawn parallels with the guidance he provided in December ahead of the last rate increase. Any signal of the BOJ's intent, in either direction, may move USD/JPY sharply.
Beyond the meeting itself, the trajectory of the conflict matters directly. If the blockade holds and crude oil remains above $100 into late April, the import price channel could intensify the BOJ's inflation concern and strengthen the case for action. If diplomacy produces a ceasefire — as briefly appeared possible during talks last week — the yen could recover rapidly as the safe‑haven dollar bid unwinds and oil prices fall back.
For now, USD/JPY sits at a level where the next 48 hours of geopolitical news and the next 14 days of central bank communication may prove more consequential than any single data release.
The performance figures quoted refer to the past, and past performance is not a guarantee of future performance or a reliable guide to future performance.