
Japanese Yen Hovers Near Critical 160 Level as BOJ Decision Looms Amid Oil Crisis
USD/JPY holds at 159 ahead of Bank of Japan meeting while surging oil prices complicate rate hike outlook

The Japanese yen remained under pressure near the psychologically critical 160 level on Monday as markets positioned ahead of the Bank of Japan's policy meeting this week. With Brent crude surging above $107 and intervention threats mounting, the BOJ faces a difficult balancing act between supporting the currency and assessing the economic impact of the Iran war.
The Japanese yen held steady around 159.3 per dollar on Monday, April 27, maintaining its vulnerable position near the psychologically important 160 threshold as traders positioned ahead of the Bank of Japan (BOJ) policy meeting scheduled for April 30. The currency has weakened 12% over the past year, pressured by widening interest rate differentials and a surging energy crisis that has complicated the central bank's monetary policy outlook.
Oil Shock Reshapes BOJ Calculus
The backdrop for this week's BOJ decision has shifted dramatically due to the ongoing Iran conflict, now in its ninth week. Brent crude climbed above $107 per barrel on Monday, up 2.33% on the day, as the Strait of Hormuz remained effectively closed amid stalled US-Iran peace negotiations. The International Energy Agency has described this as the largest energy supply shock on record, with profound implications for Japan's economy.
"The Iran conflict has triggered the largest energy supply shock on record, intensifying inflationary pressures and weighing on the global growth outlook," according to the IEA's latest assessment.
In a note released early Monday, Goldman Sachs raised its oil price forecasts for Q4 2026, lifting Brent crude to $90 per barrel and WTI to $83 per barrel, citing massive Middle East production losses driving unprecedented global inventory draws. This represents a significant upward revision from their previous Q4 forecasts of $80 for Brent and $75 for WTI.
BOJ Expected to Hold Rates, Signal June Hike
Market consensus suggests the BOJ will keep interest rates steady at 0.75% when it concludes its two-day meeting on Wednesday. However, sources familiar with the central bank's thinking told Reuters last week that policymakers are likely to signal their readiness to raise rates as soon as June, despite the uncertain economic outlook.
"Unlike last year when higher U.S. tariffs forced a pause in its rate-hike cycle, the BOJ will stress its resolve to keep raising rates as the energy shock risks fuelling broad-based cpi" title="Understanding inflation and CPI in forex">inflation," Reuters reported, citing sources close to the bank's thinking.
The central bank is expected to sharply revise up its fiscal 2026 inflation forecast while cutting its growth projection. Rising costs for oil-related raw materials are already prompting some Japanese firms to consider price hikes, adding to domestic inflationary pressures even as the global growth outlook darkens.
BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda faces the delicate challenge of signaling the bank's determination to normalize monetary policy and support the yen, while avoiding policy moves that could choke off Japan's fragile economic recovery. On April 13, Ueda warned that uncertainty over the Middle East conflict could hurt factory output, signaling the bank's alarm over the war's economic impact.
Intervention Threats Mount as 160 Looms
The yen's proximity to the 160 level has triggered increasingly forceful warnings from Japanese authorities. Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama renewed intervention threats on Friday, April 24, stressing Japan's readiness to take "decisive action" in close coordination with the United States.
"We can take decisive measures against sudden movements that do not reflect fundamentals. This refers to intervention, and there are no constraints or restrictions on this," Katayama emphasized in her Friday comments.
The USD/JPY pair traded at 159.15 as of Monday morning in Asia, down 0.15% from the previous session but still dangerously close to levels that historically have triggered Japanese currency intervention. In 2022, authorities intervened when USD/JPY approached similar levels, though the current environment is complicated by the divergent monetary policy paths between the Federal Reserve (holding at 3.75%) and the BOJ (at 0.75%).
Market Positioning Ahead of Key Week
Beyond the BOJ decision, currency traders are also watching for any developments in US-Iran diplomacy. Reports emerged Monday that Iran had submitted a new proposal to the US via Pakistani mediators, aimed at reopening the Strait of Hormuz and de-escalating the conflict. However, US President Donald Trump instructed negotiators to suspend discussions, while Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian reiterated that Tehran would not engage in "imposed negotiations under threats or blockade."
The yen has strengthened modestly over the past month, gaining 0.37%, but remains significantly weaker year-over-year. Trading Economics forecasts USD/JPY at 158.48 by the end of Q2 2026, with further strengthening to 154.53 expected over the next 12 months—projections that assume the BOJ proceeds with gradual rate hikes and the energy crisis eventually stabilizes.
Key Levels to Watch
Technical analysts are closely monitoring several critical thresholds for USD/JPY:
- 160.00: Psychological resistance and potential intervention trigger
- 159.00-159.50: Current consolidation zone
- 157.50: Near-term support if yen strengthens
- 152.00: Major support level from earlier 2026 trading range
For the BOJ decision, markets will scrutinize three key elements: the policy statement language regarding future rate hikes, the updated quarterly economic forecasts, and Governor Ueda's post-meeting press conference for clues on the timing of the next rate increase.
With Japan's inflation running at 1.5% year-over-year as of March—below the BOJ's 2% target but rising—and the yen under sustained pressure, the central bank faces one of its most challenging policy meetings in recent years. How it balances currency stability, inflation risks, and growth concerns will set the tone for yen trading through the summer months.
USD/JPY last traded at 159.15, with volatility expected to increase sharply as Wednesday's BOJ announcement approaches.

Jesus Guzman
Founder & Lead Analyst
Jesus is the founder of FN Pulse and a veteran trader with over 15 years of experience in financial markets. He specializes in quantitative analysis and is passionate about bringing transparency and data-driven insights to the retail trading industry.