Citigroup analysts expect Japanese authorities to refrain from stepping back into currency markets unless the yen slips further to around ¥160–¥162 per U.S. dollar. According to the bank, should Tokyo intervene, the immediate objective would be to nudge the dollar-yen rate back toward the ¥155–¥157 band. However, Citi noted that a move beneath ¥155 would likely be required to more fully absorb persistent dollar-buying pressures from Japanese small and medium-sized enterprises.
The bank identified several influences behind the more measured posture from Japanese policymakers. Chief among them are Tokyo's relationship with Washington, the domestic economic priorities set by Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, and prevailing global market conditions. While some commentators point to the International Monetary Fund's exchange-rate classification as a limiting factor, Citi said that IMF rules are not the decisive consideration for Japan's intervention calculus.
Citi said Japanese policymakers place greater weight on international commitments - notably G7 coordination - and on keeping aligned with the United States than on preserving a particular IMF exchange-rate designation. The bank highlighted U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent's public backing of Japan's currency approach during a May visit as an important element in that bilateral relationship.
That Washington support, Citi argued, could be conditional. U.S. backing may depend in part on whether the Takaichi administration maintains the operational independence of the Bank of Japan and steers clear of fiscal measures that would be deemed excessively expansionary. The bank also observed that Prime Minister Takaichi has historically favored reflationary economic policies, which could reduce the political pressure in Tokyo to counteract yen depreciation relative to previous administrations.
On the market side, Citi pointed to the recent behavior of Japanese long-term interest rates. Though yields have risen amid the currency's decline, the bank described the move as relatively orderly, suggesting reduced urgency for aggressive FX intervention from authorities. Past interventions did not appear to heavily disrupt domestic equities, but Citi cautioned that heightened volatility in both U.S. and Japanese stock markets could make officials more reluctant to act if intervention risks destabilizing U.S. financial markets or complicating cooperation with American policymakers.
Finally, the bank noted the broader backdrop of generalized U.S. dollar strength and elevated global risk aversion. In that environment, yen weakness looks less exceptional, which Citi said further diminishes immediate pressure on Tokyo to re-enter FX markets.
In short, Citi's assessment frames Tokyo's likely approach as cautious and conditional: policymakers appear prepared to tolerate additional yen weakness until either the currency moves into the ¥160–¥162 zone or other developments - including shifts in U.S. support, domestic fiscal settings, or market stability - change the political and market calculus.