158.251USD
Today
+0.08%
5 Days
+0.12%
1 Month
+0.35%
6 Months
+6.34%
Year to Date
+0.99%
1 Year
+1.29%
Opening Price
158.122Previous Closing Price
158.125The 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.

The configuration is mixed.
below 157.56, expect 157.19 and 156.96.
rebound towards 158.62
USD/JPY trades around 157.90 on Tuesday at the time of writing, down 0.10% on the day, as the US Dollar (USD) comes under renewed pressure from political and trade-related headwinds. The pair retreats, weighed down by broad-based weakness in the Greenback against major currencies.

The Japanese Yen (JPY) is up a modest 0.2% vs. the US Dollar (USD), tentatively attempting to extend its recent recovery against the USD while trading defensively against all of its G10 peers, Scotiabank's Chief FX Strategists Shaun Osborne and Eric Theoret report.

The USD/JPY pair is down 0.2% to near 157.80 during the European trading session on Tuesday. The pair is under pressure as the US Dollar (USD) underperforms across the board amid ongoing disputes between the United States (US) and the European Union (EU) over Greenland’s sovereignty.

TradingKey - A bombshell hit global financial markets on Tuesday as the yield on Japan's 40-year government bond (JGB) returned to the 4% threshold for the first time in 30 years, marking a record high since the maturity was first issued in 2007. This bond market turmoil coincided with Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s election declaration. At a press conference on Monday, PM Takaichi officially confirmed that the House of Representatives will be dissolved this Friday (23rd), with a snap election scheduled for February 8. She also unveiled a major campaign pledge to slash the food consumption tax from 8% to 0%.

The Japanese Yen (JPY) underperformed while government bonds plunged following Prime Minister Takaichi’s announcement of a snap election and a pro-stimulus agenda including a two-year food tax break, BBH FX analysts report.

UST bond yields are higher and no doubt yields in the UK and Germany will open higher later this morning following the huge sell-off of super-long JGBs in Japan.
