161.712
Today
-0.04%
5 Days
+0.68%
1 Month
+1.59%
6 Months
+3.73%
Year to Date
+3.20%
1 Year
+11.61%
Opening Price
161.750Previous Closing Price
161.772The 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.

Long positions above 161.60 with targets at 161.85 & 162.00 in extension.
below 161.60 look for further downside with 161.45 & 161.30 as targets.
long positions above 161.60 with targets at 161.85 & 162.00 in extension.
The USD/JPY pair edges lower during the Asian session on Thursday, albeit it lacks follow-through and finds support ahead of the 161.50 level.

The USD/JPY pair trades on a flat note near a multi-decade highof around 161.75 during the early Asian trading hours on Thursday. The potential upside for the pair might be limited amid heavy speculation of imminent currency intervention from Japanese authorities.

USD/JPY spent Wednesday grinding higher again, which by rights should not be happening. The Bank of Japan (BoJ) raised its policy rate only last week, and a hike is meant to put a floor under a currency, not watch it slide toward generational lows.

Scotiabank strategists Shaun Osborne and Eric Theoret note the Japanese Yen (JPY) is only fractionally weaker versus the Dollar (USD) but is outperforming across G10 crosses, reflecting market caution over potential official intervention.

The Japanese Yen registers minimal losses against the US Dollar amid mixed risk appetite, with global equities fluctuating between gainers and losers, while investors continue to monitor developments in the Middle East.

Lloyd Chan at MUFG views Singapore Dollar (SGD) as relatively defensive versus other ASEAN currencies thanks to Monetary Authority of Singapore's (MAS) tight Singapore Dollar Nominal Effective Exchange Rate (S$NEER) policy, which anchors volatility and inflation expectations.

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