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FX.co ★ sangita_murmu | USD/JPY

USD/JPY

From my personal perspective, the USD/JPY 4H chart currently reflects a market transitioning from a corrective rebound into a broader bearish phase, with volatility compressing near short-term support. The pair appears to have completed a lower high structure around the 157.70–158.00 region before entering an impulsive decline toward the 152.50–153.00 zone. This sequence reinforces my view that momentum has shifted decisively in favor of sellers, at least in the medium-term horizon.Technically, price is trading below the 20 and 50-period moving averages, both of which are now sloping downward. The bearish crossover combined with consistent rejection from dynamic resistance suggests that rallies are being sold rather than accumulated. Additionally, the Ichimoku Cloud ahead is thick and bearish, with price positioned below the cloud and the lagging span confirming downside momentum. This alignment typically reflects strong trend continuation conditions rather than consolidation.From a Fibonacci perspective, if we measure the most recent swing high near 157.80 down to the 152.50 swing low, the 38.2% retracement aligns around 154.50, while the 50% retracement sits near 155.15 and the 61.8% golden ratio level near 155.80. These retracement zones coincide with previous structural support turned resistance. In my view, any corrective pullback into the 154.50–155.80 range would offer higher-probability short entries, particularly if accompanied by bearish rejection candlesticks such as a shooting star, bearish engulfing pattern, or evening star formation on the 4H timeframe.Candlestick behavior at recent lows also provides insight. The cluster of small-bodied candles with long lower wicks near 152.50 suggests temporary demand absorption rather than strong bullish reversal. I do not yet see a confirmed reversal structure such as a morning star combined with strong volume expansion. Therefore, I interpret this as consolidation within a downtrend rather than a base formation.

USD/JPY

In terms of risk management, my preferred strategy would involve waiting for a pullback toward 155.00 (near the 50% Fibonacci level and prior breakdown area). A short entry around that region with a stop-loss above 156.20 (above the 61.8% retracement and recent lower high structure) would imply approximately 120 pips of risk. Targeting a retest of 152.50 offers around 250 pips of potential reward, yielding roughly a 1:2 risk-to-reward ratio. If bearish momentum accelerates, an extended target toward 150.80 (a projected measured move equal to the previous impulsive leg) could improve the ratio closer to 1:3.From a macroeconomic standpoint, I see broader forces reinforcing this technical bias. The market continues to reassess U.S. Federal Reserve policy expectations. If upcoming U.S. inflation data shows moderation, Treasury yields could soften further, reducing support for the dollar. At the same time, the Bank of Japan’s gradual normalization stance, even if cautious, has shifted long-term expectations for yen appreciation. Any signal of wage growth sustainability or policy adjustment from the BOJ could amplify downside pressure on USD/JPY. However, I remain mindful of event risk. Upcoming U.S. CPI, PPI, and labor market releases will likely drive volatility. If inflation surprises to the upside, yield repricing could invalidate the bearish setup and push price back above 156.00. In that scenario, a sustained close above 156.50 would weaken my short bias and shift focus toward 158.00 retests. Therefore, confirmation through price action remains essential.I also consider broader risk sentiment. Equity market corrections or geopolitical uncertainty tend to favor yen strength due to its safe-haven status. Conversely, strong global risk appetite and carry trade demand could slow the decline. Monitoring the U.S. 10-year yield correlation and equity index performance will provide additional confirmation.In summary, my outlook remains moderately bearish while price stays below 156.00. I prefer selling rallies into Fibonacci resistance with confirmation from bearish candlestick patterns and maintaining disciplined risk-to-reward ratios of at least 1:2. A decisive break below 152.50 would open the path toward 150.80 and possibly 149.50 in the coming weeks, particularly if macroeconomic data supports a narrowing rate differential between the U.S. and Japan. Until proven otherwise, I interpret current consolidation as preparation for continuation rather than reversal.
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