By Makiko Yamazaki and Takaya Yamaguchi
TOKYO, March 13 (Reuters) – Japan is likely to have less room to intervene in the currency market than before, even as the Middle East conflict pushes the yen toward the $160 core, once considered the trigger threshold for authorities to act.
Officials’ recent reluctance to talk about the currency could push the yen to 165 against the dollar, some analysts say, a move that could boost import spending and broad inflation at a time when the Iran war is pushing up crude oil prices.
Unlike in 2022 and 2024 when Tokyo took advantage of the US-Japan price gap to intervene against trade-related yen selling, the currency’s recent slide has been driven more by safe-haven demand for the dollar and concerns that higher oil costs could hurt Japan’s economy.
Japanese policymakers say privately that intervening now to support the yen could prove futile, as such actions could be drowned out by a flood of dollar demand that would only intensify as the war continues.
“We have to see how the war ends and how disrupted shipping routes through the Strait of Hormuz remain,” one official said. “It’s about buying dollars, not selling yen.”
Different this time
Currency intervention is said to be most effective when done to open up large speculative positions, such as when Tokyo stepped in to strengthen the yen in 2022 and 2024.
Now, there are few signs of such speculative pressure building in the currency market. Net short positions in the yen totaled 16,575 contracts in early March, according to data from the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
This is much smaller than the 180,000 contracts in July 2024, when Japan last intervened to buy the yen.
While officials in Tokyo stepped up their warnings as the yen hit the psychologically important 160 level, they avoided the usual reference to speculative yen selling – a textbook justification for stepping into the market.
Asked on Friday about the possibility of intervention, Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama declined to give a direct answer, saying the government was ready to act at any time, “considering the impact of currency movements that may affect people’s livelihoods.”
“If Japan intervenes now, it won’t be very effective because the safe-haven dollar can easily continue, regardless of the situation in the Middle East,” said Shota Ryo, FX strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities.
“Intervention could even risk encouraging speculators to sell the yen again,” he added.






