Yen Weakness Stokes Intervention Fears
2026-06-18 02:33
By
Jam Kaimo Samonte
1 min. read
The Japanese yen weakened to around 160.6 per dollar on Thursday, falling to its lowest level since July 2024 and heightening speculation that authorities could once again intervene to support the currency.
The yen has now erased all of the gains recorded on April 30, when Tokyo carried out a record-setting intervention to stabilize the exchange rate.
The latest decline came despite the Bank of Japan’s gradual policy tightening, including a 25-basis-point rate increase to 1% earlier this week aimed at countering an energy-driven inflation shock linked to the Middle East conflict.
The currency remained under pressure as the dollar strengthened after the US Federal Reserve kept interest rates unchanged while signaling growing support for rate hikes later this year.
Meanwhile, President Donald Trump signed an interim agreement to end the war with Iran and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, easing concerns over Japan’s economy, which depends heavily on energy imports from the Middle East.