Why the Yen May Stay Weak Even as the Dollar Slips Elsewhere USD/JPY is hovering near 162.00 after hitting a 40-year high of 162.84, and with Japan's wage data softening and inflation gauges slipping below 2%, the Bank of Japan has little reason to turn hawkish soon. The Japanese Yen is on the back foot, with USD/JPY consolidating around 162.00 after surging to a 40-year high of 162.84 last week. According to Brown Brothers Harriman's Elias Haddad, the bar for a hawkish repricing of the Bank of Japan is high, and that is precisely why any relief rally in the Yen is likely to run into a ceiling, regardless of where current rate expectations sit. The latest signals out of Japan give the central bank little reason to rush. Wage growth in May softened, and most of the underlying CPI indicators the BoJ tracks eased further below 2% during the month. In plain terms, inflationary pressure remains limited, and without prices climbing sharply there is no compelling case for policymakers to lift interest rates aggressively. Wage growth isn't the inflation driver markets fear Markets often assume that rising wages automatically stoke inflation, but Japan tells a different story. With annual total factor productivity growth running at roughly 1%, the wage gains being seen there are not a major source of inflation pressure. That combination, softer pay data alongside inflation gauges drifting below 2%, points to a central bank in no hurry to act, leaving the Yen to contend with a distinctly soft backdrop. A strong bond auction and falling long-end yields The same rate picture rippled through Japan's government bond market. Yields on 30-year Japanese Government Bonds (JGBs) dropped as much as 10bps to 4.00% on solid buying interest from investors. The 30-year bond sale drew heavy demand, with an average bid-to-cover ratio of 4.55 against just 2.94 in June, the highest reading since May 2019. The numbers underline just how firm investor appetite was. The dollar's mixed session: pound and euro Elsewhere, it was a two-sided day for the US Dollar. GBP/USD extended its winning streak to a ninth straight session, trading around 1.3390 during Asian hours on Tuesday. The pound firmed as market participants scaled back expectations for Federal Reserve rate hikes this month and in September, leaving the greenback under pressure. EUR/USD, by contrast, eased toward 1.1400 in European trading on Tuesday after being rejected at 1.1450. A modest recovery in the safe-haven Dollar, renewed tensions in the Strait of Hormuz and an Asian tech sell-off fed risk aversion, dragging the euro lower. Gold, oil and the Hormuz factor Precious metals were caught in the crosscurrents too. Gold held an offered tone heading into the European session, though it stayed above the $4,100 mark. Crude oil prices edged higher amid the fresh tensions in the Strait of Hormuz, reviving inflationary concerns. That in turn triggered another leg up in US Treasury bond yields, offering some support to the Dollar and weighing on the non-yielding yellow metal for a second straight day. Bonk tumbles after a treasury exploit In crypto, Bonk stayed under pressure, trading below $0.0000044 after shedding more than 10% the previous day. Monday's correction followed an announcement from Bonk Decentralized Autonomous Organization that a governance exploit had led to the theft of $20 million worth of BONK tokens from its treasury, a blow that sent the price sliding. Central banks prepare to say less Running beneath all of this is a bigger shift: central banks are changing how much they say. For years these institutions told markets what might come next, but the mood is turning. From the Federal Reserve to the European Central Bank and the Bank of England, policymakers are now pushing back against forward guidance. The upshot is that traders may get fewer clear signposts than before and will have to lean more heavily on the data to work out where policy is headed. What this means for you • For investors: With little room for a hawkish BoJ, the Yen is unlikely to strengthen quickly, meaning USD/JPY could stay elevated. • For everyday readers: A weak Yen paired with costlier crude oil can lift import bills and revive inflation worries globally, which eventually feeds into prices. Questions & Answers 1. Where is USD/JPY trading now? It is consolidating around 162.00 after touching a 40-year high of 162.84. 2. Why is a hawkish BoJ repricing seen as unlikely? May wage data softened and most of the underlying CPI indicators eased below 2%, keeping inflation pressure limited. 3. How did the 30-year Japanese bond auction go? It drew an average bid-to-cover ratio of 4.55, well above June's 2.94 and the strongest reading since May 2019. 4. Why did GBP/USD rise? Markets scaled back expectations for Federal Reserve rate hikes this month and in September, weakening the Dollar and lifting the pound to around 1.3390 for a ninth straight day. 5. What caused Bonk to drop? Bonk DAO said a governance exploit led to the theft of $20 million worth of BONK tokens from its treasury, pushing the price below $0.0000044. 6. What happened with gold and crude oil? Gold held above $4,100 but stayed under pressure, while Strait of Hormuz tensions lifted crude and pushed Treasury yields higher, weighing on gold. https://trendkia.com/en/market/40-sala-ke-shikhara-ke-bada-yena-kyon-kamajora-bana-raha-sakata-hai-bank-of-japan-ke-age-mushkila-raha-5444 TrendKia — Har trend, sabse pehle.