USD/JPY Price Forecast - USDJPY=X  Drops Below 151.10 as Overbought Dollar Faces Pressure from Weak Momentum and Rising Geopolitical Tension

USD/JPY Price Forecast - USDJPY=X Drops Below 151.10 as Overbought Dollar Faces Pressure from Weak Momentum and Rising Geopolitical Tension

The U.S. Dollar’s rebound stalls near 151.40 as fading momentum, Japan’s political uncertainty, and widening yield gaps pressure USD/JPY (USDJPY=X) toward the 150.20–149.50 zone | That's TradingNEWS

TradingNEWS Archive 10/16/2025 6:45:52 PM
Forex USD/JPY USD JPY

USD/JPY (USDJPY=X) Faces Renewed Pressure as Momentum Weakens Near 151.40 Resistance

The USD/JPY (USDJPY=X) pair remains under significant downward pressure, trading around 151.04, down 0.52% after failing to hold above the 151.40 resistance. The U.S. Dollar’s rebound from 150.50 lows stalled amid renewed geopolitical tensions between Washington and Beijing, which sparked a broad softening in the Greenback. Despite the Yen’s traditional safe-haven appeal, its recovery remains limited by persistent political instability in Japan, where the collapse of the ruling LDP–Komeito coalition has clouded the path forward for new Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi. The market now anticipates a deeper test of the 150.20–150.00 support region, with downside risk expanding toward 149.50 if risk-off sentiment intensifies.

Dollar’s Recovery Falters as Overbought Momentum Peaks

The Dollar Index (DXY) has paused its bullish momentum after a multi-week rally that saw several dollar pairs reach their six-month highs. Overbought momentum indicators—particularly the RSI on the daily chart—show clear signs of fatigue, retreating from peaks last seen in December 2024. The DXY is now consolidating near 99.50–100.20, a critical resistance area, while support lies around 98.30, aligning with a 0.382 Fibonacci retracement of the May–September trendline. This structure signals that the Dollar’s strength may be reaching its limit, increasing the probability of short-term pullbacks across major pairs including USD/JPY.
In this context, USD/JPY’s repeated failure to clear the 151.40 ceiling underscores weakening bullish conviction. The Relative Strength Index remains below the neutral 50 level on the 4-hour chart, while the MACD histogram has flattened, suggesting fading momentum. Traders see potential for short-term rebounds but expect them to be capped below 151.55, as a decisive break above this level is needed to negate the current bearish bias.

Technical Landscape: 149.50–153.00 Range Defines the New Phase

UOB Group’s FX strategists view the current price structure as the early stage of a range-trading phase between 149.50 and 153.00, highlighting constrained volatility after months of sharp directional moves. On the hourly chart, a lower high formation has emerged near 151.25, reinforcing the view that the near-term bias remains on the downside.
The immediate pivot zones are 151.40 (resistance) and 150.20 (support). A sustained drop below 150.20 could expose 149.90 and 149.50, marking the lower edge of the anticipated trading corridor. Conversely, a strong break above 151.55 may reintroduce bullish momentum, targeting 151.90, followed by 152.60, where the pair encountered heavy selling earlier this week. The price structure continues to mirror the USDCAD trendline setup, where both pairs display stretched bullish momentum and similar pullback patterns, suggesting exhaustion rather than fresh strength.

Macro Headwinds: Trade Tensions and Policy Divergence Weigh on Sentiment

Rising tensions between the U.S. and China have reignited global risk aversion, dampening investor appetite for the Dollar and driving modest inflows toward safe-haven assets such as the Yen and Gold. However, the Yen’s response has been muted due to Japan’s internal political uncertainty and the Bank of Japan’s cautious stance on tightening. With the BoJ’s Tamura scheduled to speak later this week, markets remain skeptical of any hawkish pivot.
In contrast, the Federal Reserve continues to hold a dovish bias as Chair Jerome Powell signaled readiness to extend the rate-hold period amid slowing growth. The yield spread between U.S. 10-year Treasuries (4.17%) and Japanese Government Bonds (0.78%) remains wide, anchoring the structural bullish foundation for USD/JPY even as short-term traders price in a corrective decline. The pair’s reaction to macro data, including U.S. business inventories, housing data, and Fed commentary, will determine if it can maintain above the 150 handle into next week’s trading sessions.

 

Overbought Channel Signals Reversal Risk

Technical analysis from institutional desks indicates that USD/JPY is testing the upper boundary of a rising channel that began in April 2025. A confirmed breakout above 153.30 would validate a bullish continuation toward 157.00, but the probability of such a move has declined sharply given the overextended conditions.
The three-day chart reveals momentum comparable to levels last observed in January 2025—historically followed by 1.5–2.0% corrections within two weeks. If prices remain capped at 151.40 and slip below the midrange of the channel, bears may push toward 149.90, with deeper support emerging at 148.00–147.40, where previous institutional demand reappeared. The combination of overbought momentum, softening yields, and macro uncertainty supports a near-term bearish stance, even as medium-term fundamentals stay broadly Dollar-positive.

Yen Crosses Show Mixed Signals: AUD/JPY and GBP/JPY Stabilize

The broader Yen complex paints a mixed picture. AUD/JPY has held above 97.85, forming higher lows and a bullish divergence on the hourly RSI(14), suggesting a short-term rebound toward the 99–100 region before potential exhaustion. Similarly, GBP/JPY printed a bullish inside day after Tuesday’s bearish engulfing pattern, signaling stabilization above 201.00 and potential retracement toward 203.50–204.50 before resuming its broader downtrend.
By contrast, USD/JPY appears the weakest among major Yen pairs, with price action below key moving averages and inverted hammer patterns confirming distribution at the top of the range. The divergence across Yen pairs indicates that while cross-currency momentum remains constructive, the Dollar-Yen pair is specifically vulnerable to correction given its heavy positioning and crowded long exposure.

Event Calendar: High-Impact Catalysts Ahead

The near-term direction of USD/JPY will hinge on several scheduled economic events. Key releases include Japan’s Core Machinery Orders (Aug), Tertiary Industry Activity Index, and speeches from BoJ officials Tamura and Lane, all of which may influence monetary expectations. On the U.S. side, traders will monitor IMF meetings, Philadelphia Fed manufacturing data, and remarks from Fed Vice Chair Barr and Governor Waller for cues on interest-rate trajectories.
These catalysts coincide with global macro data, including UK GDP, ECB’s Lane speech, and Canadian housing data, shaping cross-asset volatility. Should the Fed reaffirm its dovish tone while BoJ policymakers maintain ultra-loose conditions, the net effect may preserve the pair’s long-term bullish bias—but only after short-term selling pressure subsides around the 150 zone.

Market Sentiment and Positioning

According to CFTC data, speculative net longs on USD/JPY remain near their 2025 highs, leaving the pair exposed to profit-taking. The USD heat map shows the Greenback rising 0.09% versus the Yen but lagging against European currencies such as the EUR (+0.18%) and GBP (+0.37%), reflecting uneven dollar strength. Interbank flows suggest Japanese importers are still buying USD on dips, but macro funds are rotating into defensive positions ahead of potential IMF policy shifts.

Outlook and Investment Stance

From a structural standpoint, USD/JPY (USDJPY=X) remains trapped between strong fundamentals supporting the Dollar and short-term technical exhaustion favoring a pullback. The prevailing data suggest a neutral-to-bearish short-term bias targeting 150.20, with 149.50 as the lower bound if bearish momentum accelerates. Any recovery above 151.55 could reestablish the bullish channel, but conviction remains weak.
Given the weakening momentum, overbought RSI, and resistance at 151.40, the stance is Sell on Rallies / Hold for 149.50–150.00, anticipating a corrective phase before renewed accumulation. Medium-term traders should monitor upcoming U.S. macro data and BoJ policy statements for signals of potential re-entry, but for now, USD/JPY tilts Bearish in the short term, constrained by fading momentum and renewed macro headwinds.

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