Key points:
- Yen crumbles despite rate hike
- Traders got no surprises
- Looser conditions to stay in place
No surprises here is what happened. Bullish yen traders didn’t get what they wanted and that’s bolder guidance for next steps.
💴 Yen Hike, But Dollar Says “Meh”
- The Bank of Japan raised rates by 25 basis points to 0.75%, the highest since 1995 – exactly as expected and, crucially, already priced in.
- Instead of strengthening, the yen weakened, sending the USDJPY up nearly 1% toward ¥156.40. Buy the rumor, sell the fact, Japanese edition.
- Traders wanted a hawkish roadmap. They got cautious continuity instead.
🏦 Continuity Killed the Yen Buzz
- The BOJ stressed real interest rates remain “significantly negative,” meaning policy is still accommodative despite the hike.
- Translation: borrowing stays cheap, liquidity stays loose, and yen bulls don’t get the tightening signal they hoped for.
- Without firmer guidance on future hikes, the move looked symbolic rather than structural.
🔍 Bigger Picture Still Matters
- Japan’s inflation has stayed above 2% for 44 straight months, with November CPI at 2.9%, supporting gradual normalization.
- But with debt near 230% of GDP, the BOJ can’t hike aggressively without risking fiscal stress.
- Analysts now see the next rate increase pushed out to mid-2026 – plenty of time for carry traders to stay comfy.
Source: Tradingview


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