Yen Slips as Oil Prices Rise
2026-03-24 02:41
By
Jam Kaimo Samonte
1 min. read
The Japanese yen weakened past 158.5 per dollar on Tuesday, trimming gains from the previous session as oil prices recovered some of Monday’s losses, keeping pressure on Japan’s oil-importing economy.
The moves followed Iran’s denial of any talks to end the conflict, pushing back against President Donald Trump’s claims.
On Monday, the yen had jumped 0.5% after Trump postponed planned strikes on Iranian energy infrastructure for five days, citing productive discussions with Iran over the past two days.
Domestically, data showed core inflation rose 1.6% in February, the smallest increase since March 2022 amid government efforts to ease living costs, though rising energy prices from the Iran war could push inflation higher in the coming months.
The soft inflation reading offered little impetus to change monetary policy after the Bank of Japan held rates steady last week.