USD/JPY has been trading close to multi-decade highs, increasing the risk of intervention in the Japanese yen. The pair reached its highest level since 1986, and since the beginning of July markets have grown more nervous about the prospect of yen-support measures, with attention also on the tolerance of Japanese and potentially US authorities.
Market positioning is described as stretched: traders are long US dollars and extremely short yen, a mix that can amplify volatility. If sentiment turns in favour of the yen—whether due to intervention concerns or other catalysts—the move could reverse quickly, suggesting USD/JPY may struggle to return to this week’s peaks in the near term.
Mounting Intervention Risk and Market Positioning Vulnerabilities
With USD/JPY having tested the 175.00 level this week, a high not seen since 1986, the risk of direct intervention from Japanese authorities is now the market’s primary focus. We believe official warnings about watching currency moves with a “high sense of urgency” are a clear signal that the tolerance for further yen weakness is gone. The nervousness that has crept into the market since the start of July suggests this week’s peak may not be revisited soon.
The market’s positioning is dangerously one-sided, which could make any potential downturn in USD/JPY much sharper and more violent. Recent data from the CFTC shows that speculative net short positions against the yen have swelled to over 150,000 contracts, a level of bearishness not seen in nearly two decades. This extreme crowding means a rush for the exits could be triggered by even a small shift in sentiment, causing a rapid unwind.
Option Strategies and Trading Opportunities Amid Volatility
For those of us holding long USD/JPY positions, this is a critical time to implement hedging strategies to protect our gains. We should be buying out-of-the-money put options on USD/JPY, which function as insurance against a sudden, intervention-driven price drop. This allows us to cap our downside risk while remaining in the trade.
The heightened uncertainty itself presents a trading opportunity through options. Implied volatility in the yen has surged, with the Cboe/CME FX Yen Volatility Index (JYVIX) climbing over 15% in the past week, reflecting market anxiety. We see value in buying option straddles or strangles, which are strategies that will profit from a large price move in either direction, without us having to guess the timing perfectly.
We also believe the probability of a sharp yen recovery makes speculative bearish positions attractive over the next few weeks. Buying put spreads is a cost-effective way to bet on USD/JPY falling, targeting a move back towards the 165-170 range. We remember the interventions of 2022, when similar conditions led to the Ministry of Finance spending over $60 billion and causing the pair to fall more than 5 yen in a single session.