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The Bank of Japan raised its benchmark overnight rate by 25 basis points to 1.0% on Tuesday — the highest level since 1995 — only to see the yen’s gains evaporate a day later when the Federal Reserve’s hawkish pivot kept the rate differential firmly in the dollar’s favor and USD/JPY anchored near the 160 level.
The BoJ’s policy board voted 7-1 to lift the uncollateralized overnight call rate, effective Wednesday, with board member Toichiro Asada the lone dissenter. Governor Kazuo Ueda was absent due to medical treatment, leaving Deputy Governor Shinichi Uchida to chair the meeting and conduct the post-decision briefing.reuters
Uchida struck a hawkish tone, warning of upside inflation risks and stating the bank would continue to raise rates, citing elevated inflation expectations and core inflation running above the 2% target. The BoJ also announced it would maintain its quantitative tightening schedule, reducing government bond purchases by 200 billion yen per quarter until monthly purchases stabilize at 2 trillion yen from April 2027.cnbc
Hours after Tokyo’s announcement, the Federal Reserve under new Chairman Kevin Warsh held rates steady at 3.5%-3.75% in a unanimous 12-0 vote on Wednesday — but the accompanying projections sent a decidedly hawkish signal. The updated dot plot eliminated all expectations for rate cuts this year, with the median 2026 year-end projection rising to 3.8%, implying at least one hike is possible. The FOMC statement also dropped language that had previously suggested a bias toward easing.cnbc
The roughly 275-basis-point gap between the Fed’s rate floor and the BoJ’s new 1% target ensures the yen carry trade — borrowing cheaply in yen to invest in higher-yielding dollar assets — remains attractive. Net short positions on the yen sit at their highest level since 2017.litefinance
Despite Japan reaching its highest borrowing costs in three decades, the rate hike had “no effect” on USD/JPY quotes, which continued to trade near 160. Analysts noted that the combination of still-wide rate differentials, robust U.S. employment, and the Fed’s inflation concerns driven by Middle East energy disruptions leave the yen with limited room to strengthen. The pair’s proximity to 160 — a level that previously triggered suspected intervention checks by Japanese authorities — sets up a continued standoff between monetary policy normalization in Tokyo and hawkish patience in Washington.youtube