
USD/JPY Breaks 159.00 as Bank of Japan Faces 77% Rate Hike Odds
The Japanese yen extended its slide in Asian trade despite a forecast-beating 2.1% GDP expansion.
USD/JPY cleared the 159.00 handle during the Asian session as rising global yields overpowered strong domestic GDP data. Meanwhile, the US Dollar Index slipped to 99.19 after geopolitical tensions cooled, triggering a sharp reversal in crude oil prices.
USD/JPY Climbs Past 159.00 Despite Strong Japanese Economic Growth
USD/JPY climbed above 159.00 to trade at 159.01 during the Asian session on Tuesday, extending its slide even after Japan reported a forecast-beating 2.1% annualized first-quarter GDP expansion. The yen selloff highlights the overpowering effect of widening yield differentials, as analysts at MUFG noted the pair risks testing the 160.00 threshold in the short term. Official government data showed private consumption, representing over 50% of the Japanese economy, increased by 0.3% in the first quarter, topping the 0.1% consensus.
Swap markets now price in a 77% probability that the Bank of Japan will deliver a 25-basis-point rate hike at its June meeting, pushing the benchmark rate to 1.0%. Persistent domestic price pressures reinforce the case for tighter monetary policy. Japan's GDP deflator rose 3.4% year-over-year in the first quarter, beating the 3.1% forecast. The central bank officially raised its fiscal year consumer price cpi" title="Understanding inflation and CPI in forex">inflation forecast to 2.8%, up from 1.9%, while cutting its 2026 economic growth projection to 0.5%.
The ongoing weakness in the yen forces the BOJ into a difficult position regarding its 500 trillion yen bond portfolio. Market turbulence limits the pace of quantitative tightening required to support the currency without triggering a domestic liquidity crisis.
US Dollar Index Slips to 99.19 on Geopolitical De-escalation
The broader US Dollar Index (DXY) slipped 0.09% to 99.19 following a sudden shift in Middle East geopolitics. US President Donald Trump announced a pause on a planned military strike on Iran to allow for peace negotiations, stripping the greenback of its immediate safe-haven premium. The de-escalation triggered a sharp reversal in energy markets, with Brent crude futures for July delivery falling $1.73 to $110.37 per barrel. US West Texas Intermediate crude for June delivery declined 63 cents to trade at $108.03 per barrel.
Underlying energy supply constraints remain tight despite the intraday price drop. The US Energy Department reported a record drawdown of 9.9 million barrels from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. This withdrawal brings total domestic stockpiles down to 374 million barrels, marking the lowest level since July 2024. European Central Bank officials, including President Christine Lagarde, are actively discussing the inflationary impact of these elevated energy costs at the G7 Central Bank Governors meeting in Paris.
Dollar pricing also reflects the impending leadership change at the Federal Reserve ahead of the next FOMC meeting. The US Senate confirmed Kevin Warsh to succeed Jerome Powell, with the swearing-in ceremony scheduled at the White House on Friday. Warsh inherits a federal funds rate target range of 3.50% to 3.75% and an economy that added 115,000 jobs in April, significantly beating the 62,000 forecast. March non-farm payrolls were upwardly revised to 185,000, signaling a resilient labor market that gives the Fed room to maintain its current interest rate stance.
Sterling Drops to 1.3384 After UK Sheds 100,000 Jobs
GBP/USD slid to an intraday low of 1.3384 during the London open after the Office for National Statistics reported terrible employment data, confirming the loss of 100,000 UK jobs in April. The headline unemployment rate climbed to 5.0%, up from 4.9% the previous month, while wage growth slowed to 3.4%.
The deterioration in the British labor market alters the immediate monetary policy outlook for the Bank of England. Interest rate derivatives markets shifted rapidly following the release, pricing in 57 basis points of rate cuts by the end of 2026. This repricing removes the yield support that had previously anchored the pound above the 1.3400 level.
In the broader European session, EUR/USD exchanged near 1.1650, attempting a mild recovery against the softer dollar. Technical analysts project a potential test of support near 1.1525 if bearish pressure resumes. The USD/CHF pair traded lower at 0.7856, reflecting volatile intraday swings as the Swiss franc initially caught safe-haven bids before the Iran tensions cooled. The franc remains tethered to the Swiss National Bank's low 0.25% interest rate.
Gold Retreats Below $4,550 as Indian Rupee Hits Record Low
Spot gold (XAU/USD) dropped 0.48% to $4,545.10 per troy ounce, abandoning its recent highs as the geopolitical risk premium evaporated. The precious metal tumbled to a cycle-low support of $4,480 per ounce in early trading before recovering slightly. Spot silver experienced a sharper sell-off, dropping 2% to trade at $76.00 per ounce amid broader macroeconomic headwinds.
In emerging markets, the USD/INR exchange rate plunged to an all-time intraday low of 96.47. The Indian rupee stands as Asia's worst-performing currency in 2026, dropping 1.5% this month alone amid $23.2 billion in foreign equity outflows year-to-date. The sliding rupee dragged down the broader Indian equity index, with Hindalco Industries falling 1.20% to 1,040.50 rupees.
Global equity futures reacted negatively to the shifting rate expectations and inflation fears. Nasdaq 100 futures dropped 0.64%, S&P 500 futures fell 0.39%, and Dow futures edged down 0.15% in premarket trading. Tech stocks remain under pressure, with Nvidia slipping 1.3% ahead of its Wednesday earnings report. In the cryptocurrency space, Bitcoin traded near the $77,000 mark, struggling against rising treasury yields and continuous exchange-traded fund outflows.
Key Levels and Upcoming Catalysts
As you manage your positions into the New York session, the Canadian CPI release at 8:30 AM ET provides the next major volatility catalyst. Consensus forecasts project Canadian headline inflation accelerating to 3.1% year-over-year from 2.4% in March. You should monitor the USD/CAD pair near the 1.3750 resistance zone, with the 20-day exponential moving average sitting at 1.3701 acting as immediate dynamic support, a key focus for traders mapping support and resistance levels.
For yen crosses, watch the 160.00 psychological barrier on USD/JPY, which MUFG analysts flag as a critical resistance threshold. In the sterling market, a sustained break below 1.3384 opens the door for further downside toward 1.3350, as traders fully price in the Bank of England's projected 57 basis points of easing. Gold traders must watch the $4,480 support floor, as a daily close below this level invalidates the near-term bullish structure.

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Expert Trading Analysts
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