158.710USD
Today
+0.01%
5 Days
-0.17%
1 Month
+1.86%
6 Months
+6.59%
Year to Date
+1.28%
1 Year
+5.33%
Opening Price
158.682Previous Closing Price
158.695The Indicators feature provides value and direction analysis for various instruments under a selection of technical indicators, together with a technical summary.
This feature includes nine of the commonly used technical indicators: MACD, RSI, KDJ, StochRSI, ATR, CCI, WR, TRIX and MA. You may also adjust the timeframe depending on your needs.
Please note that technical analysis is only part of investment reference, and there is no absolute standard for using numerical values to assess direction. The results are for reference only, and we are not responsible for the accuracy of the indicator calculations and summaries.

Short positions below 159.15 with targets at 158.35 & 158.05 in extension.
above 159.15 look for further upside with 159.40 & 159.65 as targets.
short positions below 159.15 with targets at 158.35 & 158.05 in extension.
USD/JPY edges lower after registering gains in the previous day, trading around 158.70 during the Asian hours on Wednesday. The pair weakens as the Japanese Yen (JPY) gains support following the release of the Bank of Japan’s (BoJ) January Meeting Minutes.

The USD/JPY resumes its upward trajectory after testing the 20-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) at 158.10 on Monday, rising towards 159.00, posting gains of over 0.14%.

USD/JPY trades around 158.70 on Tuesday at the time of writing, up 0.16% on the day, supported by a US Dollar (USD) that maintains a bullish bias amid ongoing geopolitical and economic uncertainty.

Brown Brothers Harriman’s (BBH) Elias Haddad highlights that USD/JPY is trading directionless just below 159.00 as Japanese inflation slowed in February but is expected to rebound.

The Japanese Yen (JPY) claws back its early losses against the US Dollar (USD), turning flat around 158.50 during the European trading session on Tuesday. The USD/JPY pair falls back as the US Dollar surrenders its early gains amid improving investors’ risk appetite.

Commerzbank analyst Volkmar Baur highlights that Japanese inflation fell more than expected in February, with weak services and food prices pointing to ongoing disinflation despite higher Oil.
