160.612
Today
-0.01%
5 Days
+0.17%
1 Month
+1.29%
6 Months
+3.82%
Year to Date
+2.49%
1 Year
+10.99%
Opening Price
160.618Previous Closing Price
160.626The 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 positive.
below 160.21, expect 160.04 and 159.95.
the upside prevails as long as 160.21 is support
The USD/JPY pair rises near the 160.40 level after the Federal Reserve (Fed) left interest rates unchanged in the 3.50%-3.75% range, as widely expected, in Kevin Warsh’s first policy meeting as Fed Chair.

The Japanese Yen (JPY) remains under pressure despite the Bank of Japan’s latest rate hike, with analysts highlighting that the move has not been enough to trigger a sustained recovery for the Japanese currency.

Societe Generale’s Kit Juckes notes that recent G10 policy moves, including a BOJ hike, have not produced dramatic FX shifts. He argues that a dovish Fed outcome would favour short USD/JPY positions.

Kit Juckes at Societe Generale highlights that recent G10 central bank actions have not sparked major FX moves, with EUR/USD still range-bound. He notes deeper Eurozone GDP forecast cuts versus other regions.

The Japanese Yen (JPY) nurses mild gains against the US Dollar (USD) on Wednesday, as the USD/JPY pair eases to 160.20, still above 160.00, considered the limit of tolerable JPY weakness for Japanese authorities.

OCBC’s Christopher Wong highlights that the BoJ’s widely expected 25 bp hike to 1.0% and confirmation of tapering ending in 2027 delivered limited support for the Japanese Yen.

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