In early February 2026, the USD/JPY pair is locked in a high-stakes standoff as the 154.00 level acts as a psychological ceiling. Market sentiment is dominated by the looming threat of currency intervention from Japanese authorities and a shift in Federal Reserve policy that has sent the US Dollar Index to a near four-year low.
Market Dynamic: The “Intervention Zone”
As the yen plummeted toward the 159 level in late January, Japanese Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama issued a “bold action” warning, signaling that Tokyo is prepared to deploy its $1.16 trillion in foreign reserves to stabilize the currency.
Verbal Intervention: The Ministry of Finance (MoF) has successfully capped the pair’s recovery at 154.74 as of January 30, with traders wary of “rate checks”—a traditional precursor to actual yen-buying intervention.
Political Pressure: Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi is navigating a delicate balance; while a weak yen benefits exports, the rising cost of living is a major hurdle ahead of the general election scheduled for February 8, 2026.
The “Fed Pivot”: The bearish tide for USD/JPY is being fueled by the Federal Reserve’s transition into an easing cycle. The US Dollar Index (DXY) recently broke below the 97.0 level, removing much of the upward momentum that pushed the pair higher in 2025.
Technical Analysis & Key Levels
The pair is currently showing signs of a “fragile rebound” after touching oversold territory on the Relative Strength Index (RSI).
| Level Type | Price Point | Market Significance |
| Primary Resistance | 155.00 | A break above this level is needed to put bulls back on a stable footing. |
| Secondary Resistance | 156.00 | Former support turned resistance; likely to attract heavy selling. |
| Pivotal Support | 152.45 | The January 27 low; a breach here could open the door to 150.00. |
| Psychological Floor | 150.00 | A major historical level and a likely target for MoF-backed moves. |
Catalysts to Watch: February 2026
US Non-Farm Payrolls (NFP): Set for release in early February, a lower-than-expected jobs figure would likely accelerate the USD/JPY selloff, potentially testing the 152.00 support.
Japan General Election (Feb 8): The market is watching for Takaichi’s “reflationary” mandate. A win could lead to further BoJ policy shifts, impacting yen volatility.
US Policy Uncertainty: Continued discussion of US tariffs and “currency imbalances” with Asian partners remains a background risk that could trigger sudden shifts in dollar demand.
“Tokyo still has plenty of firepower to act… history tells you that intervention is only a temporary solution, but with foreign reserves at $1.16 trillion, speculators are staying cautious,” noted a senior currency strategist.






