USD/JPY forecast: Can a strong economy survive prolonged dovishness?

October 22, 2025
A large metallic yen (¥) symbol standing under bright spotlights on a dark stage, symbolising the Japanese currency being in the global spotlight or under scrutiny.

Analysts say Japan’s economy can sustain its current momentum under prolonged dovish policy - but not indefinitely. Growth remains steady, inflation has stayed above the Bank of Japan’s 2% target for more than three years, and exports are finally recovering. 

Yet, the BoJ’s slow path toward tightening and a new government’s focus on fiscal stimulus are testing how much patience markets can bear. With the USD/JPY pair holding near 152, traders are weighing whether Japan’s strong fundamentals can coexist with a weak currency, or if policy divergence with the U.S. will soon push the pair toward 160.

Key takeaways

  • Japan’s trade deficit narrowed slightly to ¥234.6 billion in September from ¥242.8 billion in August, suggesting export momentum but missing forecasts for a surplus.
  • Exports rose 4.2% YoY, the first increase since April, while imports surged 3.3%, their first gain in three months.
  • A Reuters poll found 96% of economists expect BoJ rates to reach 0.75% by March 2026, with 60% predicting a 25 bps hike this quarter.
  • Sanae Takaichi’s election as Japan’s first female Prime Minister spurred equity gains and Yen weakness as markets priced in more fiscal stimulus and delayed BoJ tightening.
  • The USD/JPY pair hovers near 152, supported by Fed rate-cut expectations and broad uncertainty over Japan’s policy direction.

Japan fiscal stimulus optimism vs. fiscal constraints

The election of Sanae Takaichi marks a historic milestone - Japan’s first female Prime Minister - and a clear policy inflection point. Takaichi’s platform emphasises economic revitalisation, defence investment, and stronger U.S. relations, signalling a government ready to spend.

Her coalition, formed with the Japan Innovation Party, promised fiscal stimulus to drive growth - echoing elements of Abenomics. 

The Japan 225 has rallied nearly 13% since early October, briefly nearing the 50,000 level before profit-taking set in. 

Source: TradingView

Yet, optimism about stimulus-led growth has simultaneously pressured the Yen, with traders anticipating a delay in BoJ normalisation. Still, Takaichi’s administration faces constraints. 

The coalition’s 231 seats in the lower house fall short of the 233 needed for a majority, forcing her to rely on opposition support to pass legislation. This weak parliamentary position limits the scale of fiscal expansion and injects political uncertainty into Japan’s economic outlook.

Bank of Japan interest rates: Resilience defies policy inertia

Japan’s macro picture has turned unexpectedly robust.

  • The trade deficit narrowed for a second month, driven by improved export performance and moderating import costs.
  • Exports rose 4.2% year-on-year, marking their first increase since April, supported by demand from Asia and Europe.
  • Imports jumped 3.3%, their strongest gain in eight months, reflecting solid domestic consumption and higher energy costs.

Meanwhile, Japan’s GDP has expanded for five straight quarters, confirming a durable recovery from 2023’s stagnation. 

Source: Trading Economics, Cabinet Office Japan

Inflation remains above 2%, supported by rising wages and service-sector demand. These conditions would trigger tightening in any other major economy.

Source: Trading Economics, Ministry of Internal Affairs & Communications

Yet, despite these fundamentals, the BoJ remains the only major central bank still below 1% policy rates. Deputy Governor Shinichi Uchida has reaffirmed that future hikes will depend on “sustainable inflation trends,” while Board Member Hajime Takata stated that Japan has “roughly achieved” its price target - signalling cautious optimism but not urgency.

This mismatch between strong economic data and hesitant policy is keeping the Yen under pressure, as investors look elsewhere for yield.

BoJ’s policy rate: The slow road to 0.75%

The market expects change - just not quickly. According to a Reuters survey, 64 of 67 economists (96%) forecast the BoJ’s policy rate will reach 0.75% by March 2026, with 45 of 75 respondents (60%) expecting a 25 bps rate hike this quarter.

That timeline underscores just how gradual BoJ normalisation will be. The BoJ’s strategy hinges on ensuring wage gains are durable and not merely the result of cost-push inflation. But the risk is that patience turns into policy inertia, leaving the Yen vulnerable to capital outflows if other central banks ease faster.

Across the Pacific: Fed cuts, fiscal chaos, and Dollar fatigue

The U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) trades near 98.96, sliding after a brief recovery. A looming U.S. government shutdown, now in its fourth week, has frozen key data releases and clouded Fed visibility. The Senate has failed 11 times to pass a funding bill, making it the third-longest shutdown in U.S. history.

The CME FedWatch Tool now prices in a 96.7% chance of a rate cut in October and a 96.5% chance of another in December.

Source: CME


Fed officials are leaning dovish:

  • Christopher Waller supports another immediate cut,
  • Stephen Miran argues for a more aggressive 2025 easing path, and
  • Jerome Powell confirmed the Fed is “on track” for another quarter-point reduction.

With the U.S. economy slowing, the rate differential between Japan and the U.S. is narrowing, making the Dollar less dominant. A faster Fed pivot could therefore cap USD/JPY upside, even without BoJ intervention.

USD JPY technical insight: Between fiscal hope and policy drag

The appointment of Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama - known for favouring a stronger Yen and calling 120–130 per USD “fundamentally justified” - has introduced a more balanced tone. However, broader market positioning still leans toward Yen weakness.

Analysts at Commerzbank note that the new government’s business-friendly orientation is unlikely to support long-term depreciation, projecting sideways USD/JPY movement as Japan’s fiscal push and BoJ patience offset one another.

After three consecutive sessions of losses, the Yen strengthened slightly midweek following the trade data release. The USD/JPY pair pulled back modestly but remains near 151.84. A bullish move is likely to meet resistance at the 153.05 price level, with RSI showing strengthening buy momentum. Conversely, if sellers prevail, they are likely to find support at the 150.25 and 146.70 price levels.

Source: Deriv MT5

Traders can track these levels in real time using Deriv MT5 and may consider placing stop-loss orders near the 150.25 support zone to manage risk in this volatile pair. Using Deriv’s economic calendar helps anticipate BoJ or Fed announcements that typically move the Yen.

Market impact and trading implications

For traders, USD/JPY presents a rare balance of risk and reward.

  • Upside case: If BoJ delays tightening while the Fed stays cautious, USD/JPY could retest 158–160, testing market tolerance for Yen weakness.
  • Downside case: If the Fed cuts twice and BoJ delivers even a modest hike, the pair could retrace to 145–147, unwinding part of 2024’s rally.

The carry trade remains a major driver of Yen sentiment. As global investors continue borrowing in Yen to fund higher-yield positions in other currencies, Japan’s low interest rates sustain the JPY’s role as a global funding currency. Any shift in BoJ policy or sudden increase in market volatility could force carry-trade unwinding, triggering rapid Yen appreciation.

The near-term tone remains range-bound, but volatility risk is high as politics and policy pull in opposite directions. Equity traders may find support in Japan’s stimulus agenda, while currency traders should prepare for potential BoJ recalibration before mid-2026.

Ultimately, Japan’s strong economy is proving resilient - but its currency may not stay patient forever. The question for 2025 is no longer whether Japan can grow, but how much dovishness its strength can bear before markets force the BoJ’s hand.

The performance figures quoted are not a guarantee of future performance.

자주 묻는 질문

견조한 경제 지표에도 불구하고 엔화는 왜 강세를 보이지 않았을까?

통화 정책 기대치와 정치적 신호가 상충하기 때문입니다. 일본의 강한 수출, 임금 상승, 그리고 인플레이션은 일반적으로 엔화 강세를 이끌지만, 다카이치의 재정 부양책 공약은 더 많은 차입과 지출을 의미하며 이는 통화 약세로 이어지는 정책입니다. 한편, 일본은행(BoJ)의 완만한 긴축 속도는 수익률을 낮게 유지해 엔화 자산에 대한 글로벌 수요를 줄입니다. 그 결과, 강한 경제와 약한 통화가 공존하게 됩니다.

USD/JPY가 정말 다시 160을 시험할 수 있을까요?

네, 하지만 그럴 경우 정책 조치나 개입 논의가 촉발될 가능성이 높습니다. 160선은 심리적이면서도 역사적으로 중요한 수준입니다. 이 환율은 2024년 7월과 2025년 1월 두 차례 160을 시험한 뒤 급격히 되돌아섰습니다. 만약 BoJ가 소극적인 태도를 유지하고 Fed가 금리 인하를 미룬다면, 투기적 모멘텀이 환율을 더 끌어올릴 수 있습니다. 그러나 일본 재무성의 개입 위험이 그 임계값을 넘는 지속적인 상승을 제한할 가능성이 높습니다.

엔화가 의미 있는 반등을 하려면 무엇이 필요할까?

BoJ의 긴축 신호와 Fed의 정책 전환이 동시에 이루어져야 합니다. 일본이 25bp 금리 인상을 단행하고, 연말까지 Fed가 두 차례 금리를 인하한다면 금리 격차는 급격히 좁혀질 것입니다. 이러한 변화와 무역 지표 개선이 결합되면 USD/JPY는 145~147선까지 되돌아올 수 있습니다. 임금 주도의 인플레이션과 가계 소비 증가와 같은 구조적 변화가 동반된다면 이러한 반등은 더욱 지속 가능해질 것입니다.

일본의 새로운 지도부는 통화 기대에 어떤 영향을 미치나요?

다카이치 행정부는 재정 확대와 통화 정상화 사이에서 갈등하고 있습니다. 그녀의 경기부양 약속은 단기적인 성장과 시장 신뢰를 뒷받침하지만, 금리 인상을 지연시킬 위험이 있습니다. 그러나 엔화 강세를 지지하는 가타야마 사츠키를 내각에 임명한 것은 내각 내의 균형을 시사합니다. 투자자들에게 이는 단기적으로는 비둘기파적이지만, 장기적으로는 정책 정상화가 여전히 가능함을 의미합니다.

미국 정책이 일본의 환율 전망에 어떤 영향을 미칠까?

미국의 재정 교착 상태와 임박한 금리 인하가 핵심적인 역할을 합니다. 정책 완화로 달러가 약세를 보이면 일반적으로 엔화가 회복되는 데 도움이 됩니다. 일본이 저금리를 유지하고 확장적 재정 정책을 지속하는 한, 엔화의 상승 여력은 제한적일 것이라는 전망이 많습니다. Fed의 금리 인하 속도와 BoJ의 금리 인상 속도에 따라 USD/JPY가 횡보할지, 하락할지, 아니면 160을 돌파할지가 결정될 것입니다.

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