USD/JPY hovered near 155.19 on November 19, 2025—flat—as Deutsche Bank’s latest outlook tempers yen upside from BOJ hikes, citing PM Takaichi’s fiscal stimulus risks and stalled tightening cycle. This equilibrium—down 2.95% monthly—reflects DB’s 152 three-month target, up from prior, yet warns of intervention above 157.00 per George Saravelos. As JGB yields hold 0.91%, DB’s yen call eyes moderate strength to 148 by year-end, balancing growth at 1.2% against U.S. dollar highs.
Japan’s pivot wavers: Ueda’s 2.0% CPI with 4.5% Shunto wages eyes December lift from 0.50%, yet Takaichi’s $100 billion package waters consolidation, curbing odds. Contrasting Fed’s 4.75%—40% December cut—DXY near 100 narrows carries, with Nikkei off 1.2%. Trade +3% aids, projecting 1.1% GDP if ¥1.3 trillion interventions hold. DB flags Treasuries’ competition from rising JGBs as fiscal risk signal.
Technically, USD/JPY‘s range etches a descending wedge from October’s 156.97 high, RSI at 50 neutral amid 22% yen volumes. Support at 155.00—50-day EMA—resistance at 155.695 tests weekly high. Above 156.00 targets 161.81 Fib, sub-154.00 risks 150.00. Volatility at 12% awaits BOJ minutes.
This yen call flatlines TOPIX banks on margins. For traders, spotlights JPY’s policy perch. As 2026 looms, DB’s outlook narrates caution: yen yield versus fiscal fog. Monitor December 19 BOJ—hike delivery ignites 152.00, framing call as JPY’s tempered tonic.






