Goldman Sachs Dollar To Yen Forecast: USD/JPY Bias Higher On Election Risks - Exchange Rates Org UK
Goldman Sachs flags upside risk for USD/JPY on Japanese election uncertainties, aligning with its own Dec26 target of 148 while the consensus sees 147.5. The desk's view is contrarian to JPMorgan's bullish yen outlook.
What the desk is arguing
Goldman Sachs sees the bias for USD/JPY as higher due to Japanese election risks, implying that political uncertainty could delay Bank of Japan normalization and keep the yen under pressure. This thesis runs counter to the consensus view that the yen will strengthen over the medium term.
The election risk premium could push USD/JPY temporarily above the current spot of 157, testing levels closer to 160 before any correction. Goldman's Dec26 target of 148 suggests eventual yen appreciation, but near-term upside risks dominate.
Where it sits in our coverage
Our internal consensus target for USD/JPY at Dec26 is 147.5, with a wide firm spread from a low of 140 (Morgan Stanley) to a high of 164 (JPMorgan). Goldman's Dec26 target of 148 aligns closely with the median, but its near-term election-driven bias is more hawkish on USD/JPY than the consensus path.
Key firms with divergent Dec26 targets include:
- **JPMorgan**: 164.00 (bullish USD/JPY) - **Goldman Sachs**: 148.00 (bearish USD/JPY) - **Morgan Stanley**: 140.00 (very bearish USD/JPY)
How other firms see it
**Goldman Sachs** is aligned with the consensus trend towards yen strength by Dec26, but its near-term election risk view is more cautious. **JPMorgan** is the notable contrary firm, expecting USD/JPY to rise to 164 by Dec26, a full 16 figures above Goldman's target.
Other firms like **Morgan Stanley** (140) and **Deutsche Bank** (143) are even more bullish on the yen than Goldman, while **ING** (152) and **Barclays** (149) are closer to the median. The wide range reflects deep uncertainty over BOJ policy and fiscal direction.
How firms align with this view
Aligned with the desk view
Contrary positioning
Key takeaways
- 01Goldman Sachs sees near-term upside risk for USD/JPY due to Japanese election uncertainty, potentially delaying BOJ normalization.
- 02Goldman's Dec26 target of 148 is close to the consensus of 147.5, but its near-term bias diverges from the median path.
- 03JPMorgan stands out as the most bullish USD/JPY firm with a Dec26 target of 164, while Morgan Stanley is the most bearish at 140.
Market implications
USD/JPY could experience elevated volatility around the election period, with potential spikes above 160. Options markets may see increased demand for upside protection. If election risks fade, yen gains could resume, aligning with the central tendency of forecasts towards 147-148 by year-end.
Risks to this view
The main risk is that election outcomes lead to a more decisive fiscal/monetary stance, accelerating BOJ tightening and strengthening the yen more than anticipated. Conversely, a chaotic election outcome could further delay reform and push USD/JPY persistently higher.
Sources & References
How we cover this story
Cross-firm research
USD/JPY at 156.80: Consensus Targets 147.5 but JPM Holds 164
USD/JPY trades 6.3% above the eight-firm median target of 147.5, with a 24-point dispersion range exposing deep disagreement on BoJ policy timing and US yield durability.
USD/JPY at 156.90: Consensus Targets 147.5, Spread Runs 24 Figures
USD/JPY trades 6.4% above the eight-firm median Dec-26 target of 147.5, with a 24-figure dispersion exposing deep disagreement on BoJ pace and US yield trajectory.
USD/JPY at 157.23: Consensus Sees 147.5, Spread Runs 24 Figures
USD/JPY trades 6.6% above the eight-firm median Dec-26 target of 147.5, with a 24-figure dispersion that maps directly onto competing BoJ rate-path assumptions.