Barclays expects the Japanese yen to remain under pressure in the near term amid ongoing geopolitical developments, yet the bank projects a modest, gradual recovery once the negative terms-of-trade shocks reverse. The firm cautioned that while the yen may weaken, any excessive depreciation is likely to be capped around the 160 level because intervention risks are elevated.
Barclays highlighted that Prime Minister Takaichi's reflationist appointments to the Bank of Japan board have prompted questions about the prudence of monetary policy. Market participants, the bank noted, are also watching potential shifts in Japan's fiscal trajectory tied to higher defense spending. Barclays warned that such fiscal deterioration could contribute to renewed yen weakness and might coincide with wider Japanese government bond term premia and rising break-even inflation.
On rates, Barclays said much of the further alignment between U.S. and Japanese policy rates appears to be priced into markets, reducing the potential for a strong downward push on the dollar-yen pair. The bank's internal fair value estimate for USD/JPY is 148, implying that while a modest rebound for the yen is expected, a degree of risk premium versus that fair value is likely to persist.
Summarizing its outlook, Barclays combines concerns about policy and fiscal developments with market pricing that already reflects a good portion of interest-rate convergence. That mix, the bank argues, supports a scenario in which the yen experiences limited additional weakness beyond the 160 area but does not immediately return to fair value levels without a gradual correction in the shocks weighing on the currency.
Investors and market participants should therefore balance the prospect of a modest yen rebound over time against the near-term pressures from geopolitical forces and the policy and fiscal questions highlighted by Barclays.