Updated
Updated · Reuters · Jun 3
Japan Warns as Yen Hits 160 per Dollar, Erasing 11.7 Trillion Yen Intervention Gains
Updated
Updated · Reuters · Jun 3

Japan Warns as Yen Hits 160 per Dollar, Erasing 11.7 Trillion Yen Intervention Gains

3 articles · Updated · Reuters · Jun 3

Summary

  • 160 per dollar returned as the yen hit its weakest level since April 30, wiping out gains from Tokyo's record support operations and triggering fresh official warnings.
  • Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi and Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama said authorities were ready to respond, blaming speculative trading rather than real demand for the currency's slide.
  • A small, sharp rebound in the yen rattled traders and fueled talk of a rate check or fresh intervention, though the Finance Ministry declined to comment on any market action.
  • 11.7 trillion yen, or $73.14 billion, was spent since April in Japan's biggest one-month intervention round, yet the currency has kept weakening as oil-import costs rise and BOJ tightening remains cautious.
  • 160 has become Tokyo's key line in the sand, with analysts saying intervention odds rise sharply near that level and even more if dollar-yen reaches 162.

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