Japan’s finance minister warns of bold action as yen nears 40-year low
Tokyo signals it's ready to intervene in forex markets after spending a record $73 billion defending the yen in just one month
Japan’s Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama put currency speculators on notice this week, warning that the government is prepared to take “strong action” as the yen teeters near levels not seen since the early 1980s.
The USD/JPY pair traded between 160 and 161.4 in mid-June 2026, flirting with a 40-year low that Tokyo clearly considers a red line.
A $73 billion problem
Japanese authorities reportedly spent a record Â¥11.73 trillion, roughly $73 billion, between late April and late May 2026 trying to prop up the yen. That’s an enormous sum deployed over approximately one month. Japan’s earlier forex intervention in July 2024 totaled about Â¥5.53 trillion. The recent spending more than doubled that figure.
Katayama’s comments on June 19 emphasized Japan’s readiness to act against what officials describe as “excessive speculative movements” in the foreign exchange market.
The minister also noted that Japan remains in close contact with US Treasury officials under a joint statement that allows for coordinated market actions.
Why the yen keeps falling
The yen’s persistent weakness comes down to interest rate differentials. The Bank of Japan has been far slower than the Federal Reserve to tighten monetary policy, making dollar-denominated assets more attractive to yield-seeking investors.
The 160 level against the dollar has become something of a psychological threshold for Japanese policymakers. Previous interventions have been triggered near this mark.
Katayama’s insistence that Japan maintains a “free hand” to intervene suggests the government isn’t ready to give up.
What this means for crypto and broader markets
Yen weakness at this scale doesn’t stay contained in forex markets. Historically, periods of fiat currency instability have driven interest in alternative stores of value. No specific crypto tokens were referenced in coverage of Katayama’s warnings.
Japanese retail investors, sometimes called “Mrs. Watanabe” in trading circles, have historically been active participants in both forex and crypto markets.