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← Commentary feed20 May 2026, 03:48 UTC
INVESTINGLIVEEamonn Sheridan

BofA cuts USD/JPY forecast to 152 (prior 157) and flags three triggers for yen bull turn

Lead — Bank of America (BofA) has shifted its stance on the Japanese yen from bearish to neutral, revising its end-2026 USD/JPY forecast down to 152 from 157. The adjustment reflects improving structural flows in Japan and highlights three potential catalysts that could further validate a bullish outlook on the yen. Per the full note source, potential triggers include USD/JPY reaching 160, Japan's 10-year JGB yield near 3%, or Brent crude prices dropping below $90 per barrel. This change comes as the current consensus is centered around a range targeting approximately 152 in the medium term, with no significant catalysts on the calendar to influence short-term trading sentiment.

What the desk is arguing

The desk notes BofA's adjustment reflects a cautious optimism about the JPY, influenced by structural factors such as the narrowing loan-deposit gap and rising real interest rates in Japan. As BofA indicates, the ongoing trend of capital inflows could support the yen's recovery if these catalysts materialize.

Moreover, BofA's forecast reduction comes amidst market softness for the yen, suggesting that while there is no outright bullish call, the tone reflects a significant pivot from their previous bearish outlook. The past indications of suspected ¥10 trillion of FX intervention illustrate active measures from Japanese authorities to defend the yen as it nears critical levels.

Where it sits in our coverage

Our consensus target for USD/JPY aligns closely with BofA's revised forecast at 152, with a range spanning from 149 to 160. Noteworthy projections for December 2026 include: - jpmorgan: 164.0000 - goldman: 148.0000 - barclays: 149.0000

This neutral positioning from BofA sits at the lower end of the cross-firm spectrum, which suggests a divergence in views as some firms remain more optimistic about the yen's trajectory by the end of 2026.

How other firms see it

A number of firms align with BofA's cautious stance, particularly those predicting a stable to slightly bullish trend for the yen. These include goldman and hsbc with projections around 150. Conversely, firms like jpmorgan anticipate a more substantial recovery, up to 164.

The focus remains not only on USD/JPY but also on the implications from Japan’s monetary policy stance amidst ongoing developments in G10 rates, which could influence the broader outlook for other currency pairs such as USD/CHF and AUD/JPY.

What the calendar says

No high-impact events are scheduled in the next 30 days, meaning traders will need to look to economic indicators and market sentiment to guide their expectations for USD/JPY without imminent news drivers.

How firms align with this view

consensus152.0000range149.0000160.0000

Aligned with the desk view

Contrary positioning

Key takeaways

  • 01BofA revises USD/JPY forecast down to 152 from 157, upgrading yen outlook to neutral.
  • 02Three key catalysts for bullish sentiment: USD/JPY at 160, JGB yield approaching 3%, or Brent crude below $90.
  • 03Current consensus reflects a median target of 152, with notable divergence among firms regarding long-term sentiment.

Market implications

Watch the USD/JPY level at 160 as a potential trigger for intervention. Traders should also monitor JGB yields as changes could provide insight into Japan's economic health and influence currency flows.

Risks to this view

Key risks to this outlook include sustained dollar strength driven by Federal Reserve actions or a significant increase in global crude oil prices, which could shift the dynamics back to a bearish view on the yen.

BofA has upgraded its yen view to neutral from bearish and cut its end-2026 USD/JPY forecast to 152 from 157, citing improving structural flows and flagging three catalysts that could turn it outright bullish. Summary: The following is drawn from a Bank of America Securities research note: BofA has upgraded its yen view to neutral from bearish and cut its end-2026 USD/JPY forecast to 152 from 157, even as the currency continues to weaken toward the 160 level Three catalysts would be needed to turn BofA outright bullish on the yen: USD/JPY rising to 160, Japan's 10-year JGB yield approaching 3%, or Brent crude falling below $90 per barrel BofA flagged suspected Japanese FX intervention of as much as ¥10 trillion, equivalent to around $63 billion, between late April and early May, suggesting authorities are already active in defending the currency Improving structural fundamentals underpin the upgrade, including narrowing bank loan-deposit gaps, rising real interest rates in Japan, and stronger Japanese equity performance relative to US and European markets, all of which could support capital inflows over time Persistent rate differentials between Japan and the US remain the primary headwind for the yen, but BofA sees these structural improvements as sufficient to justify removing its bearish stance Bank of America Securities has upgraded its view on the Japanese yen to neutral from bearish and cut its end-2026 USD/JPY forecast to 152 from 157, citing improving structural flow dynamics even as the currency continues to soften toward the 160 per dollar level that would likely trigger more forceful intervention from Japanese authorities. The upgrade stops short of an outright bullish call but represents a meaningful shift in stance from one of the market's more prominent yen bears.

BofA identified three specific catalysts that would be required to push it into a bullish position: USD/JPY rising to 160, Japan's 10-year government bond yield approaching 3%, or Brent crude falling below $90 per barrel. Each threshold carries its own logic. A move to 160 in USD/JPY would almost certainly prompt a decisive escalation in Japanese currency intervention, with BofA noting that suspected intervention of as much as ¥10 trillion, equivalent to around $63 billion, is already believed to have taken place between late April and early May.

A 3% JGB yield would represent a fundamental repricing of Japanese interest rates, attracting the kind of sustained capital inflows that could structurally support the currency. And Brent below $90 would substantially reduce Japan's energy import bill, one of the persistent drags on the current account that has weighed on the yen throughout the period of elevated global crude prices. Underpinning the upgrade to neutral are a set of improving domestic fundamentals that BofA argues are often overlooked in a market focused on rate differentials.

Narrowing bank loan-deposit gaps, rising real interest rates as inflation gradually moves higher in Japan, and notably stronger Japanese equity performance relative to both US and European markets are all dynamics that could encourage capital to flow back toward yen-denominated assets over time. The rate differential between Japan and the United States remains the dominant headwind, and BofA is not dismissing it. But the combination of structural improvement, intervention risk at 160, and a more active BOJ sets a credible floor under the currency that the bank no longer feels comfortable fading. --- BofA's upgrade to neutral from bearish, combined with a cut in its end-2026 USD/JPY forecast from 157 to 152, is a meaningful shift from one of the market's more prominent yen bears and will be noted by traders positioned for further yen weakness.

The three bull triggers are particularly useful as a market framework: a move to 160 in USD/JPY would likely prompt Japanese authorities to intervene more aggressively, as suggested by the suspected ¥10 trillion operation already flagged between late April and early May; a 3% JGB yield would signal a fundamental repricing of Japanese rates that would attract significant capital inflows; and Brent below $90 would dramatically reduce Japan's energy import bill, one of the structural drags on the current account. Any one of these conditions, let alone a combination, would materially shift the yen's trajectory. This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.

Sources & References

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