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Japan’s Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama held an emergency online meeting with U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Monday evening as the yen slid to approximately 161.9 per dollar, approaching its weakest level since 1986, according to Reuters, citing a source familiar with the talks.reuters
The virtual discussion focused on potential policy responses to the yen’s historic weakness, including the possibility of direct currency intervention, Japanese broadcaster TBS first reported, citing people with knowledge of the situation. The yen briefly strengthened on news of the meeting before giving back gains.usnews
Earlier on Monday, Katayama told reporters at a cabinet press conference that Tokyo “will respond appropriately to currency movements at any time,” reiterating familiar language that markets have largely dismissed. Should the dollar/yen pair surpass 161.96, the Japanese currency would hit its weakest point since December 1986.reuters
The emergency contact comes as the yen has erased all gains from Japan’s record ¥11.73 trillion (roughly $73 billion) intervention campaign conducted between late April and early May. That intervention, combined with the Bank of Japan’s decision to raise interest rates to a 31-year high of 1% at its June meeting, has failed to arrest the currency’s slide.japantimes
The underlying forces working against the yen remain formidable. The U.S. Federal Reserve struck a hawkish tone at its June 17 meeting, reinforcing expectations of elevated American interest rates and widening the gap with Japan’s still-low borrowing costs.mufgresearch
Monday’s call follows a pattern of intensifying bilateral coordination. In May, Bessent visited Tokyo and stated that both countries view “excessive fluctuations in the currency market as problematic,” language widely interpreted as tacit approval for Japanese intervention. Katayama and Bessent also agreed in April to “strengthen communication on exchange rates” during IMF meetings in Washington.reuters
Despite Japan holding over $1 trillion in foreign reserves — a war chest that could fund further intervention — analysts have noted that past efforts have delivered only temporary relief against structural pressures favoring the dollar.cnbc