
USD/JPY Nears 159.00 as Japanese 10-Year Yield Hits 2.8%
The Japanese yen faces intense selling pressure following a preliminary Q1 GDP miss and record real estate lending data.
USD/JPY advanced 0.23% to 158.98 during Monday's session after Japan's Q1 GDP printed at 0.3%, missing consensus estimates. The yen's depreciation occurred alongside a historic sell-off in the Japanese bond market, driving the 10-year yield to a 28-year high.
USD/JPY Nears 159.00 as Japanese 10-Year Yield Hits 2.8%
USD/JPY advanced 0.23% to 158.98 during Monday's European session after Japan's preliminary Q1 gross domestic product printed at 0.3%, missing the 0.4% consensus estimate. The yen's depreciation occurred alongside a historic sell-off in the Japanese bond market, where the 10-year government bond yield spiked to 2.8%, marking its highest level since October 1996. Traders aggressively sold the Japanese currency as the widening yield differential between the United States and Japan overshadowed fresh verbal warnings from Tokyo regarding potential currency intervention.
Bank of Japan Yields Hit 2.8% on Record Real Estate Lending
The catalyst for the yen's latest slide stems from dual fundamental pressures reported by the Bank of Japan this morning. Data from the central bank showed new bank lending to the real estate sector surged 15.1% year-over-year to a record 17.8 trillion yen ($112.6 billion). This lending volume exceeds the peak levels recorded during Japan's 1989 bubble economy by 70%, according to the central bank report.
Bond markets reacted violently to reports that the Japanese government plans to issue 5 trillion to 10 trillion yen in fresh debt to fund an extra budget. The 30-year Japanese government bond yield hit an all-time record, while the benchmark 10-year note climbed to 2.8%. For forex participants, rising domestic yields traditionally support a currency, but the massive impending debt issuance sparked capital flight fears, driving USD/JPY closer to the critical 159.00 resistance zone.
Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda is currently attending a two-day Group of Seven finance ministers meeting in Paris alongside European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde. According to the official G7 itinerary, the talks focus heavily on the global bond market sell-off and rising energy costs. Market participants are actively pricing in the risk that Ueda will coordinate a central bank policy response with G7 allies if the yen breaches the 160.00 threshold.
US Dollar Index Defends 99.00 as 10-Year Treasury Yields Reach 4.6%
Across the broader macro spectrum, the US Dollar Index (DXY) edged up 0.04% to 99.25, successfully defending the 99.00 support level. The greenback's strength is directly tied to the US 10-year Treasury yield, which climbed to 4.6% today, marking a one-year high. This fixed-income movement follows last week's US Consumer Price Index report, which showed headline cpi" title="Understanding inflation and CPI in forex">inflation accelerating to 3.8% year-over-year.
The combination of persistent US inflation and steady labor data continues to anchor Federal Reserve rate expectations. March Non-Farm Payrolls added 178,000 jobs, keeping the unemployment rate pinned at 4.3%. Analysts at the Philadelphia Fed revised their current-quarter headline CPI expectations to a 6.0% annualized rate, up from previous estimates of 2.7%. This hawkish repricing keeps the dollar attractive to carry traders seeking yield, particularly against low-yielding funding currencies like the yen and the euro.
In the leadership suite, Kevin Warsh will take the oath of office as the new Federal Reserve Chairman this Friday at the White House. The Fed board named Jerome Powell chair pro tempore until Warsh assumes control. Traders anticipate Warsh will inherit a complex policy environment, as the Fed currently holds its benchmark interest rate steady in the 3.50% to 3.75% target range.
Spot Gold Plunges $105 as Brent Crude Surges Past $110
The dollar's ascent triggered a massive liquidation event in the precious metals market, with XAU/USD plunging $105.95 to trade at $4,545.96 per troy ounce. The yellow metal briefly recovered to $4,562.40 during intraday trading but ultimately succumbed to the pressure of 4.6% US Treasury yields. When risk-free government bonds offer high returns, non-yielding assets like gold face intense selling pressure from institutional portfolio managers.
Energy markets provided the primary inflationary fuel driving these bond yields higher. Brent crude oil surged 1.32% to $110.70 per barrel, while West Texas Intermediate climbed 1.75% to $107.26. The International Energy Agency issued a bulletin today warning that global commercial oil inventories are depleting rapidly due to a 12-week conflict involving Iran and shipping disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz.
Oil prices experienced extreme intraday volatility, with Brent spiking to $112.10 before dropping below $109.00. The reversal occurred after President Trump announced a delay to a planned military strike on Iran. The resulting energy shock has pushed the US Producer Price Index to 6.0% year-over-year, its highest level since December 2022, forcing central banks to maintain restrictive monetary policies.
European Crosses Struggle Ahead of UK Inflation Data
In the European session, EUR/USD bounced from a local bottom of 1.1620 to trade in a narrow band between 1.1650 and 1.1669. The European Central Bank's latest Economic Bulletin warned that the ongoing Middle East oil shock poses upside risks to inflation and will negatively impact 2027 gross domestic product growth. Money markets currently price in an 86% probability that the ECB will hike its 2.00% deposit facility rate by 25 basis points at the June 11 meeting.
GBP/USD recovered from the 1.3300 level to trade near 1.3380, while GBP/JPY retook the 212.00 mark. The British pound remains capped below the 1.3450 resistance barrier due to vulnerable Gilt markets. Traders are actively positioning for Wednesday's UK CPI release, following last week's preliminary data showing the UK economy expanded by 0.6% in the first quarter.
Key Technical Levels and Upcoming Catalysts for Your Trading Session
As you manage your risk exposure through the New York crossover, the 159.00 handle on USD/JPY serves as the primary battleground. A sustained breakout above 158.98 opens the door to the 160.00 psychological resistance, a zone where Japanese Ministry of Finance officials previously executed dollar-selling operations. You must place protective stops tightly if trading the long side, as intervention headlines frequently hit the wires without warning.
For your dollar index positions, watch the 99.00 support floor. If DXY holds this level, the next upside target rests at the 100.00 mark, dependent on the 10-year Treasury yield maintaining its footing above 4.5%. In the commodities sector, your gold charts require attention at the $4,500 support level, as a daily close below this metric indicates further capitulation toward $4,480.
Your economic calendar demands focus on Wednesday's UK CPI print, which will dictate the Bank of England's near-term rate trajectory and drive GBP/USD momentum. You must also monitor the tape for any scheduled remarks from the G7 summit in Paris, as joint statements from Ueda and Lagarde regarding the bond market sell-off will inject immediate volatility into yen and euro crosses.

FN Pulse Editorial Team
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