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Japan’s BOP trade surplus shrinks to ¥6.9bn in May, signalling renewed pressure on the yen

by VT Markets
/
Jul 8, 2026

Japan’s trade balance on a balance-of-payments basis narrowed sharply in May, slipping to a ¥6.9bn surplus from ¥395.7bn in the prior month. The shift points to a near-flat external goods position over the period.

On a BOP basis, the May reading leaves the balance only marginally above zero after April’s larger surplus. The data underscore a marked month-on-month compression in Japan’s trade gap, with the surplus down by ¥388.8bn.

Implications For USD/JPY And The Japanese Yen

Given the sharp fall in Japan’s trade surplus to near zero for May 2026, we see this as a clear signal of underlying weakness for the Japanese Yen. A shrinking surplus reduces the inflow of foreign currency needed to buy Japanese goods, putting downward pressure on the JPY. We anticipate the USD/JPY currency pair will continue its upward trend in the coming weeks.

This dramatic drop is not surprising when considering recent external factors. Data from Japan’s Ministry of Finance shows that the cost of energy imports rose by 14% year-over-year in the second quarter, while recent purchasing managers’ index (PMI) data from China, a key export market, fell to 49.8, indicating a contraction. This combination of expensive imports and slowing foreign demand suggests the weak trade balance will persist.

In response, we are looking at buying USD/JPY call options with strike prices targeting the 162.50 level for late July and August expirations. Historically, periods of rapid trade balance deterioration, such as in late 2022, have preceded significant yen weakness before any official intervention. The Bank of Japan’s continued accommodative stance, reaffirmed in its June meeting, provides further support for this view.

Equity Derivatives And Volatility Outlook

For equity derivatives, this presents a mixed picture for the Nikkei 225. While a weaker yen boosts the repatriated profits of Japan’s large exporters, the reason for the weak trade data—slowing global demand—is a fundamental negative for their business. We therefore see an opportunity in buying Nikkei volatility, as the Nikkei Volatility Index currently sits at a relatively low 18.5.

Given this conflict between a supportive currency and weak global demand, we are looking at long straddle strategies on exporter-heavy ETFs. This position profits from a large move in either direction and capitalizes on the rising uncertainty. We believe the market is currently underpricing the risk of either a sharp currency-led rally or a global-demand-led downturn.

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