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  /  All News   /  Goldman Sachs Targets USD/JPY at 165, in Boost for the Yen Carry Trade

Goldman Sachs Targets USD/JPY at 165, in Boost for the Yen Carry Trade

  Japanese yen and US dollar bills with blue upward trend line showing USD/JPY exchange rate forecast

Goldman Sachs revised its 12-month USD/JPY forecast to 165 from 155 on July 6, 2026, placing it among the most bearish calls in Bloomberg’s surveyed consensus, as strategist Karen Reichgott Fishman cited Japan’s fiscal pressures, persistently elevated US Treasury yields, and only gradual Bank of Japan rate hikes as the structural drivers of continued yen depreciation.

The yen was trading at 161.79 per dollar in early Asian trading that Monday, down 0.3% on the session and near its weakest level since 1986, cementing its position as one of the worst-performing major currencies in 2026.

Goldman’s three-month target moved to 162 from 160, and its six-month target to 163 from 158 – a consistent upward shift across the entire forward curve that signals conviction rather than a single-point revision.

Foreign exchange options markets are aligned: traders assign roughly a 72% probability that USD/JPY reaches 165 by June 2027, per Bloomberg data, while hedge fund net short positioning on the yen hit its most extreme level since 2017 last month.

Goldman Sachs News: How Japan’s Debt Dynamics and Higher-for-Longer US Treasury Yields Drive the 165 Call

Goldman Sachs has revised its USD/JPY forecast to 165 from 155, placing it among the most bearish calls in Bloomberg's surveyed consensus
SOURCE: TradingView

Goldman Sachs outlook hinges on the rate differential between US Treasuries and Japanese Government Bonds, suggesting continued depreciation pressure on the yen despite its current undervaluation.

With the Federal Reserve maintaining high rates and elevated Treasury yields, capital is shifting from yen-denominated to dollar-denominated assets, exerting ongoing selling pressure on the JPY.

Japan’s fiscal challenges worsen the situation, as high debt servicing costs limit policy flexibility and undermine efforts to defend the yen.

Mark Cranfield from Bloomberg highlights that investors remember the significant drop in USD/JPY in the 1980s, indicating that the current 160–165 range isn’t unprecedented.

Gradual Bank of Japan Hikes: Why the Tightening Path Is Too Slow to Close the Rate Gap and Arrest Yen Weakness

The Bank of Japan ended its negative-rate policy and yield-curve control in early 2025 but maintains a near-zero policy rate, emphasizing gradualism to protect growth.

A modest 25-basis-point hike does not close the gap with US rates, keeping the yen a low-yield funding currency. Goldman Sachs believes the BOJ’s tightening will remain too slow to impact its 12-month forecast.

The August 2024 rate surprise showed that such assumptions can lead to rapid yen rallies, compressing USD/JPY and triggering volatility across equities and crypto.

This incident highlighted the risks of crowded yen short positions, making Goldman Sachs 165 target a cautious base case with significant tail risks.

Yen as Funding Currency: Goldman Sachs Carry Trade Endorsement and the Risk-Asset Implications of Extended Yen Weakness

Goldman endorses the yen carry trade, leveraging low JPY borrowing to invest in higher-yielding assets, expecting this strategy to remain viable through mid-2027 due to persistent yen weakness.

This scenario supports broader risk-on behavior in equities, credit, and crypto markets. However, the significant short-yen positioning among hedge funds raises concerns; any sudden yen strength could lead to a disorderly unwinding of carry trades.

This is reminiscent of the sharp crypto volatility seen in August 2024, with the potential unwind now greater due to extended positioning.

Official Intervention: Why Goldman Expects Any Ministry of Finance Defense of the Yen to Be Short-Lived Against Macro Headwinds

Japan’s Ministry of Finance is believed to have intervened in late April and early May when USD/JPY briefly exceeded 160, with BOJ data showing a drop in current account balances consistent with FX support operations totaling about ¥9.8 trillion (around $62 billionBn).

Fishman notes that while such interventions may buy time, they do not change the yen’s structural weakness. Goldman’s view suggests that macro headwinds, yield gaps, and the BOJ’s limited pace of easing will overwhelm policy efforts over the next year.

While interventions can temporarily compress USD/JPY by several hundred pips, without significant shifts in interest-rate differentials, such actions historically reverse. The 165 target reflects potential intervention without suggesting a lasting trend reversal.

The author does not hold any position in the securities discussed in the article.

The post Goldman Sachs Targets USD/JPY at 165, in Boost for the Yen Carry Trade appeared first on Tokenist.

   

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