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Japanese yen jumps against dollar hours after intervention

By Thomson Reuters May 1, 2026 | 2:08 AM

LONDON, May 1 (Reuters) – The yen suddenly jumped against the dollar on Friday, a day after Tokyo authorities were widely believed to have intervened ​to prop up the Japanese currency.

The dollar fell ‌by as much as 0.66% to a session low of 155.60 from 157.12 earlier.

The yen rose by as much as 3% on Thursday after an apparent steady stream of official buying pushed ‌the ​dollar to a low of 155.5 ⁠yen from around 158.3 ⁠over the course of about an hour, which Reuters and others reported was intervention by Japanese officials.

It was not clear what was behind Friday’s move, but ​analysts said after Thursday the market would be on edge for any sudden moves in the currency.

Japan’s ⁠top currency diplomat Atsushi Mimura ⁠said earlier on Friday that speculation remained ​rife, a blunt warning that officials were ready to step ​back into markets after intervening just hours earlier to ‌support the yen, which has lost 5% in the last three months alone.

The Ministry of Finance was not immediately available for comment.

“Liquidity is thin and people are ⁠nervous after yesterday so there is a susceptibility to volatility in the dollar/yen,” said Jeremy Stretch, head of G10 FX ⁠strategy, CIBC Capital ‌Markets.

“Every time we see a substantial move ⁠in the yen there will be ​questioning about ‌what is driving this given the ​warnings we ⁠have had.”

The wide gap between U.S. and Japanese interest rates, together with an expected drop in trading volumes ahead of a holiday stretch have made officials wary of aggressive speculative attacks.

(Reporting by Alun John and Amanda Cooper; Editing ​by Dhara Ranasinghe)