is riding expectations with near-perfect correlation to futures pricing, but all eyes now turn to Friday’s . Will jobs strength extend the rally beyond 150, or will weakness spark a reversal?
- USD/JPY holds above 149.00, bulls eye push above 150.00
- Dwindling Fed rate cut pricing fuels rebound
- U.S. payrolls key data point next week
- Support at 149.00, resistance at 151.00, 152.40
USD/JPY Outlook Summary
USD/JPY remains tethered to Fed cut pricing, with this week’s U.S. labour market data key to determining whether the breakout above 149 has staying power. Payrolls on Friday will be the key event, with any clean signal on jobs growth and unemployment likely to dictate the next move in the pair.
Fed Rate Cut Pricing Driving the Bus
Source: TradingView
USD/JPY remains heavily dictated by expectations for Federal Reserve policy, with rate cut pricing continuing to dominate as the key driver. The correlation between the pair and the shape of Fed funds futures out to September 2026 sits at an extraordinary -0.94, underscoring how tightly the yen is tracking the ebb and flow of U.S. policy expectations. While short-dated U.S. Treasury yields also retain a powerful influence, other traditional drivers such as yield differentials, risk appetite and U.S. equity market volatility have been far less significant. For now, the focus remains squarely on what could shift the outlook for U.S. rates.
Payrolls Tops Event Risk
Source: LSEG (U.S. ET shown)
In the week ahead, the September report on Friday looms as the single most important release. While the National Employment report on Wednesday is arguably a better gauge given it avoids the heavy downward revisions that frequently plague the official data, it is payrolls that carry the greater weight for the Fed. The central bank’s unusual emphasis on headline jobs growth over the means Friday’s figures will likely be decisive for USD/JPY price action. The most influential outcome would be if both the payrolls and unemployment rate send the same signal. A soft print would likely fuel expectations for deeper cuts, weighing on USD/JPY, while a strong showing could see cut pricing pared back and the pair push higher.
Recent surprises in U.S. economic data have generally tilted to the upside, including income and spending figures released last Friday, so a weak payrolls number would cut against the prevailing trend. Still, traders will be alert to the possibility of a downside miss given recent trends. Ahead of the main event, Tuesday’s survey, Wednesday’s and ADP reports, Thursday’s jobless claims and Friday’s print all have potential to stir volatility, though their impact is expected to be secondary to the payrolls report.
Source: LSEG (U.S. ET shown)
For Japan, domestic factors remain very much in the background. Comments from BOJ officials may influence if they diverge from the prevailing message that gradual rate hikes will proceed if the bank’s forecasts prove accurate, but otherwise the yen is likely to take its cues from the U.S. side. Friday’s undershot suggests upside inflation risks may be easing, allowing policymakers scope to observe incoming data before tightening again. Even so, with two board members dissenting in favour of a hike at the September meeting, the release of the summary of opinions could still generate market interest.
Ultimately, the path of least resistance for USD/JPY will be determined by the U.S. labour market. Until the September payrolls report lands, traders may be cautious to chase the pair aggressively in either direction. Any strong Fed commentary following Friday’s release could be the final word on where USD/JPY heads next.
USD/JPY Technical Analysis
Source: TradingView
USD/JPY has finally broken out of the sideways range it had been stuck in since the July payrolls report, surging above the 200DMA on Wednesday before pushing through resistance at 149.00 on Thursday. That former barrier may now switch to support, offering a potential base for longs targeting a retest of resistance at 151.00 or even 152.40. The pair held the break on Friday but was unable to build momentum beyond 150 during the session.
RSI (14) and MACD continue to trend higher in bullish territory, signalling strengthening upside pressure and keeping the bias tilted toward longs in the near term.
Even so, past attempts to hold above the 200DMA this year have been short-lived, highlighting the need to be selective with entry levels for those positioning on the long side.