Dollar-Yen is telling a different story to the rest of the FX board. While EUR and GBP have been grinding higher against the Dollar, USD/JPY has been under sustained pressure as Yen strength reasserts itself. The pair put in a clear rejection at a supply zone earlier in the week. The analysis flagged it as a high-value area where the trend was working against buyers, and the subsequent decline has been orderly and purposeful. This is not a flash move driven by thin conditions. It has all the hallmarks of institutional repositioning.
The structural picture shows a sequence of lower highs developing on the 390-minute timeframe. Each attempt to reclaim lost ground has been met with selling. The key rejection this week came from a zone that had previously acted as major support before the breakdown — when support flips to resistance and price confirms it from the underside, that is the structure telling you the directional bias clearly. The reading throughout has been to sell rallies rather than buy dips.
The 143.80 to 144.20 zone is now the ceiling. Any bounce into that area into early next week would represent the short opportunity. The downside target sits at the 141.50 to 141.80 area, which is where the next significant demand zone comes in. A clean break and close below 141.50 on the daily would open the 139 handle, which is where the larger structural picture points longer term if the Dollar continues to weaken broadly.
| Level | Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Entry Zone (Short) | 143.80 – 144.20 | Flipped resistance, supply zone, sell rally area |
| Stop | 145.10 | Above structural supply, short bias invalidated |
| Target 1 | 141.60 | Weekly demand, measured downside |
| Target 2 | 139.50 | Larger structure target if breakdown extends |
| R:R | 2.4 : 1 | To Target 1 from mid-entry |
The short bias is structurally sound, but USD/JPY carries a specific weekend risk that most pairs do not: Bank of Japan intervention. The BoJ has shown a willingness to act at weekends and on thin liquidity, particularly if the Yen appreciates sharply. There is also the standard bank holiday gap risk on the UK open Tuesday. On top of that, any risk-off event over the weekend could trigger safe-haven Yen buying that creates a gap lower in the pair. The risk score reflects a legitimate trade setup with material event risk attached to it.
USD/JPY is not a pair for holding oversized positions through weekends in the current environment. If you are short from higher levels, consider trimming into the close and holding only a portion with a stop above the supply zone. The ideal entry for new shorts is on a bounce into the 143.80 to 144.20 area early next week, where the structure gives you a defined level to trade against. Patience on this one is not optional; it is how you avoid getting caught in a gap that takes out your stop before the move even begins.