The Return of the Carry Trade in USD/JPY: Top 2024 Surprises

Article By: ,  Sr. Strategist

 

 

For about a month the logical scenario had started to play out. But, along with it came considerable collateral damage and suddenly several major publications were talking about the carry trade; or, more precisely, the unwind of the carry trade that was being accused of a de-leveraging driver across global equity markets.

When the carry trade is in-force it can be one of the most attractive venues in any market, especially for FX traders. The interest rate differential can allow for near-daily rollover payments, so, like a dividend but more frequent. And as others crowd that side of the trade to buy the higher-yielding currency while selling the lower-yielder, a trend can develop in that direction, allowing for principal gains on top of the swap or rollover earned.

In USD/JPY this started back in 2021, well before the Fed started hiking rates. The simple act of US CPI moving higher was enough to drive anticipation of eventual rate hikes from the Fed, which started to push the long side of the pair. When the Fed began to open the door to hikes in Q4 of 2021, USD/JPY got a boost; and another larger boost in March of 2022 as the Fed began to hike rates. This was the initial build of the carry trade and for USD/JPY, it drove the pair from below 105 in early-2021 to 150.00 in Q4 of 2022.

The carry trade was so logical and clear that other problems started to percolate. The Japanese Ministry of Finance worried about the repercussions of unchecked Yen-weakness, so they intervened in Q4 of that year to try to balance the matter. Because the move had become so incredibly one-sided the corresponding pullback was fast and aggressive with USD/JPY shedding more than 2400 pips in just a few short months. This was 50% of the prior bullish trend, and it held support in early 2023 as buyers jumped back on the long side of the pair, in the direction of the carry.

In November of that year, the same prior high was already back in-play at 151.95. And, again, worries began to show around the Japanese Ministry of Finance around the consequences of unchecked Yen-weakness. And much like we saw the year before a sell-off developed with that price holding as the yearly high. But this time the sell-off was less severe as price only retraced 23.6% of the 2021-2022 major move.

 

USD/JPY Weekly Chart

Chart prepared by James Stanley, USD/JPY on Tradingview

 

2024

 

As we came into 2024 it was still unclear as to whether the Fed would be able to cut rates, as this is something that would have a direct impact on the interest rate differential between Japan and the U.S. and in-turn, the carry trade.

We can see USD/JPY price action mirroring rate cut hopes or expectations in the US quite well earlier in the year. As inflation remained high, USD/JPY pushed right back up to the same 151.95 level that had held the highs for the prior two years. In April, just after an above-expected US CPI release, USD/JPY broke out above that price, setting a fresh 33-year high in the process.

It didn’t take long for USD/JPY to ascend to the next major psychological level of 160.00, which was in-play just a few weeks later. But, again, worries from the Japanese Finance Ministry drove an intervention that entailed USD-selling and JPY-buying from the Bank of Japan in effort of producing a reversal in the pair.

That’s when the 151.95 level came in as support. And then bulls did the same thing they had done for much of the prior three years, they priced in the direction of the rate differential. In June USD/JPY was back above the 160.00 level again, and that strength held into July.

 

USD/JPY Daily Chart

Chart prepared by James Stanley, USD/JPY on Tradingview

 

Carry Comes Undone

 

It was the morning of July 11th when matters began to unravel. That was the morning of a US CPI print and this time, the data came in below expectations. This gave hope that the Fed would actually be able to cut rates and along with that would be rate compression between the US and Japan, a factor that would not be positive for carry traders on the long side of the pair.

But that didn’t seem to be enough for the Bank of Japan as they also intervened that morning. And while prior intervention efforts fell flat as carry traders were there to buy support and push the bullish trend, this time there was the worry that the carry trade was over.

And when you have a crowded trade that’s starting to unwind, the smelling smoke in the crowded movie theater example comes to mind, where you might not want to wait around as the exit door is only so wide.

USD/JPY showed an aggressive sell-off that spanned into August and along the way global equities took a major hit as well, with many fingers being pointed at the Bank of Japan and the unwind of the carry trade as a culprit behind the volatility. But what doesn’t match in that scenario is the fact that the S&P 500 hit a fresh high the week after the CPI print, after USD/JPY had started to reverse. So while the unwind of the carry may have removed some leverage from global equity markets, it’s unlikely that it was the sole culprit of the sell-off.

Now on to the surprise: In the month of September as the Fed was preparing to cut rates, the move in USD/JPY had started to stall. There was one single morning of tests below the 140.00 handle, but like we saw in the US Dollar in Q4, a massive reversal developed; and for USD/JPY, that entailed a 76.4% retracement of the July-September sell-off.

I’m surprised at how aggressively that move priced-in, and the degree to which the sell-off had retraced. I was expecting carry unwind to come back on a re-test of the 150.00 level, or perhaps even the 151.95 price. But that didn’t happen as the post-election run in the Greenback simply drove the USD and related pairings to fresh highs.

But, with that said, this story isn’t over yet, and USD/JPY remains a hot button for 2025 trade, especially if the US Dollar is going to remain within its longer-term mean-reverting backdrop. It was the 140.00 level that stifled sellers in September, leading to the reversal that showed in Q4. And that’s the area that bears will need to take-out if they want to drive a larger reversal in the pair while unwinding the carry trade that built into and around the FOMC’s rate hike campaign of 2022 and 2023.

 

USD/JPY Daily Chart

Chart prepared by James Stanley, USD/JPY on Tradingview

 

--- written by James Stanley, Senior Strategist

 

 

 

For about a month the logical scenario had started to play out. But, along with it came considerable collateral damage and suddenly several major publications were talking about the carry trade; or, more precisely, the unwind of the carry trade that was being accused of a de-leveraging driver across global equity markets.

When the carry trade is in-force it can be one of the most attractive venues in any market, especially for FX traders. The interest rate differential can allow for near-daily rollover payments, so, like a dividend but more frequent. And as others crowd that side of the trade to buy the higher-yielding currency while selling the lower-yielder, a trend can develop in that direction, allowing for principal gains on top of the swap or rollover earned.

In USD/JPY this started back in 2021, well before the Fed started hiking rates. The simple act of US CPI moving higher was enough to drive anticipation of eventual rate hikes from the Fed, which started to push the long side of the pair. When the Fed began to open the door to hikes in Q4 of 2021, USD/JPY got a boost; and another larger boost in March of 2022 as the Fed began to hike rates. This was the initial build of the carry trade and for USD/JPY, it drove the pair from below 105 in early-2021 to 150.00 in Q4 of 2022.

The carry trade was so logical and clear that other problems started to percolate. The Japanese Ministry of Finance worried about the repercussions of unchecked Yen-weakness, so they intervened in Q4 of that year to try to balance the matter. Because the move had become so incredibly one-sided the corresponding pullback was fast and aggressive with USD/JPY shedding more than 2400 pips in just a few short months. This was 50% of the prior bullish trend, and it held support in early 2023 as buyers jumped back on the long side of the pair, in the direction of the carry.

In November of that year, the same prior high was already back in-play at 151.95. And, again, worries began to show around the Japanese Ministry of Finance around the consequences of unchecked Yen-weakness. And much like we saw the year before a sell-off developed with that price holding as the yearly high. But this time the sell-off was less severe as price only retraced 23.6% of the 2021-2022 major move.

 

USD/JPY Weekly Chart

Chart prepared by James Stanley, USD/JPY on Tradingview

 

2024

 

As we came into 2024 it was still unclear as to whether the Fed would be able to cut rates, as this is something that would have a direct impact on the interest rate differential between Japan and the U.S. and in-turn, the carry trade.

We can see USD/JPY price action mirroring rate cut hopes or expectations in the US quite well earlier in the year. As inflation remained high, USD/JPY pushed right back up to the same 151.95 level that had held the highs for the prior two years. In April, just after an above-expected US CPI release, USD/JPY broke out above that price, setting a fresh 33-year high in the process.

It didn’t take long for USD/JPY to ascend to the next major psychological level of 160.00, which was in-play just a few weeks later. But, again, worries from the Japanese Finance Ministry drove an intervention that entailed USD-selling and JPY-buying from the Bank of Japan in effort of producing a reversal in the pair.

That’s when the 151.95 level came in as support. And then bulls did the same thing they had done for much of the prior three years, they priced in the direction of the rate differential. In June USD/JPY was back above the 160.00 level again, and that strength held into July.

 

USD/JPY Daily Chart

Chart prepared by James Stanley, USD/JPY on Tradingview

 

Carry Comes Undone

 

It was the morning of July 11th when matters began to unravel. That was the morning of a US CPI print and this time, the data came in below expectations. This gave hope that the Fed would actually be able to cut rates and along with that would be rate compression between the US and Japan, a factor that would not be positive for carry traders on the long side of the pair.

But that didn’t seem to be enough for the Bank of Japan as they also intervened that morning. And while prior intervention efforts fell flat as carry traders were there to buy support and push the bullish trend, this time there was the worry that the carry trade was over.

And when you have a crowded trade that’s starting to unwind, the smelling smoke in the crowded movie theater example comes to mind, where you might not want to wait around as the exit door is only so wide.

USD/JPY showed an aggressive sell-off that spanned into August and along the way global equities took a major hit as well, with many fingers being pointed at the Bank of Japan and the unwind of the carry trade as a culprit behind the volatility. But what doesn’t match in that scenario is the fact that the S&P 500 hit a fresh high the week after the CPI print, after USD/JPY had started to reverse. So while the unwind of the carry may have removed some leverage from global equity markets, it’s unlikely that it was the sole culprit of the sell-off.

Now on to the surprise: In the month of September as the Fed was preparing to cut rates, the move in USD/JPY had started to stall. There was one single morning of tests below the 140.00 handle, but like we saw in the US Dollar in Q4, a massive reversal developed; and for USD/JPY, that entailed a 76.4% retracement of the July-September sell-off.

I’m surprised at how aggressively that move priced-in, and the degree to which the sell-off had retraced. I was expecting carry unwind to come back on a re-test of the 150.00 level, or perhaps even the 151.95 price. But that didn’t happen as the post-election run in the Greenback simply drove the USD and related pairings to fresh highs.

But, with that said, this story isn’t over yet, and USD/JPY remains a hot button for 2025 trade, especially if the US Dollar is going to remain within its longer-term mean-reverting backdrop. It was the 140.00 level that stifled sellers in September, leading to the reversal that showed in Q4. And that’s the area that bears will need to take-out if they want to drive a larger reversal in the pair while unwinding the carry trade that built into and around the FOMC’s rate hike campaign of 2022 and 2023.

 

USD/JPY Daily Chart

Chart prepared by James Stanley, USD/JPY on Tradingview

 

--- written by James Stanley, Senior Strategist

 

For about a month the logical scenario had started to play out. But, along with it came considerable collateral damage and suddenly several major publications were talking about the carry trade; or, more precisely, the unwind of the carry trade that was being accused of a de-leveraging driver across global equity markets.

When the carry trade is in-force it can be one of the most attractive venues in any market, especially for FX traders. The interest rate differential can allow for near-daily rollover payments, so, like a dividend but more frequent. And as others crowd that side of the trade to buy the higher-yielding currency while selling the lower-yielder, a trend can develop in that direction, allowing for principal gains on top of the swap or rollover earned.

In USD/JPY this started back in 2021, well before the Fed started hiking rates. The simple act of US CPI moving higher was enough to drive anticipation of eventual rate hikes from the Fed, which started to push the long side of the pair. When the Fed began to open the door to hikes in Q4 of 2021, USD/JPY got a boost; and another larger boost in March of 2022 as the Fed began to hike rates. This was the initial build of the carry trade and for USD/JPY, it drove the pair from below 105 in early-2021 to 150.00 in Q4 of 2022.

The carry trade was so logical and clear that other problems started to percolate. The Japanese Ministry of Finance worried about the repercussions of unchecked Yen-weakness, so they intervened in Q4 of that year to try to balance the matter. Because the move had become so incredibly one-sided the corresponding pullback was fast and aggressive with USD/JPY shedding more than 2400 pips in just a few short months. This was 50% of the prior bullish trend, and it held support in early 2023 as buyers jumped back on the long side of the pair, in the direction of the carry.

In November of that year, the same prior high was already back in-play at 151.95. And, again, worries began to show around the Japanese Ministry of Finance around the consequences of unchecked Yen-weakness. And much like we saw the year before a sell-off developed with that price holding as the yearly high. But this time the sell-off was less severe as price only retraced 23.6% of the 2021-2022 major move.

 

USD/JPY Weekly Chart

Chart prepared by James Stanley, USD/JPY on Tradingview

 

2024

 

As we came into 2024 it was still unclear as to whether the Fed would be able to cut rates, as this is something that would have a direct impact on the interest rate differential between Japan and the U.S. and in-turn, the carry trade.

We can see USD/JPY price action mirroring rate cut hopes or expectations in the US quite well earlier in the year. As inflation remained high, USD/JPY pushed right back up to the same 151.95 level that had held the highs for the prior two years. In April, just after an above-expected US CPI release, USD/JPY broke out above that price, setting a fresh 33-year high in the process.

It didn’t take long for USD/JPY to ascend to the next major psychological level of 160.00, which was in-play just a few weeks later. But, again, worries from the Japanese Finance Ministry drove an intervention that entailed USD-selling and JPY-buying from the Bank of Japan in effort of producing a reversal in the pair.

That’s when the 151.95 level came in as support. And then bulls did the same thing they had done for much of the prior three years, they priced in the direction of the rate differential. In June USD/JPY was back above the 160.00 level again, and that strength held into July.

 

USD/JPY Daily Chart

Chart prepared by James Stanley, USD/JPY on Tradingview

 

Carry Comes Undone

 

It was the morning of July 11th when matters began to unravel. That was the morning of a US CPI print and this time, the data came in below expectations. This gave hope that the Fed would actually be able to cut rates and along with that would be rate compression between the US and Japan, a factor that would not be positive for carry traders on the long side of the pair.

But that didn’t seem to be enough for the Bank of Japan as they also intervened that morning. And while prior intervention efforts fell flat as carry traders were there to buy support and push the bullish trend, this time there was the worry that the carry trade was over.

And when you have a crowded trade that’s starting to unwind, the smelling smoke in the crowded movie theater example comes to mind, where you might not want to wait around as the exit door is only so wide.

USD/JPY showed an aggressive sell-off that spanned into August and along the way global equities took a major hit as well, with many fingers being pointed at the Bank of Japan and the unwind of the carry trade as a culprit behind the volatility. But what doesn’t match in that scenario is the fact that the S&P 500 hit a fresh high the week after the CPI print, after USD/JPY had started to reverse. So while the unwind of the carry may have removed some leverage from global equity markets, it’s unlikely that it was the sole culprit of the sell-off.

Now on to the surprise: In the month of September as the Fed was preparing to cut rates, the move in USD/JPY had started to stall. There was one single morning of tests below the 140.00 handle, but like we saw in the US Dollar in Q4, a massive reversal developed; and for USD/JPY, that entailed a 76.4% retracement of the July-September sell-off.

I’m surprised at how aggressively that move priced-in, and the degree to which the sell-off had retraced. I was expecting carry unwind to come back on a re-test of the 150.00 level, or perhaps even the 151.95 price. But that didn’t happen as the post-election run in the Greenback simply drove the USD and related pairings to fresh highs.

But, with that said, this story isn’t over yet, and USD/JPY remains a hot button for 2025 trade, especially if the US Dollar is going to remain within its longer-term mean-reverting backdrop. It was the 140.00 level that stifled sellers in September, leading to the reversal that showed in Q4. And that’s the area that bears will need to take-out if they want to drive a larger reversal in the pair while unwinding the carry trade that built into and around the FOMC’s rate hike campaign of 2022 and 2023.

 

USD/JPY Daily Chart

Chart prepared by James Stanley, USD/JPY on Tradingview

 

--- written by James Stanley, Senior Strategist

 

 

 

 

For about a month the logical scenario had started to play out. But, along with it came considerable collateral damage and suddenly several major publications were talking about the carry trade; or, more precisely, the unwind of the carry trade that was being accused of a de-leveraging driver across global equity markets.

When the carry trade is in-force it can be one of the most attractive venues in any market, especially for FX traders. The interest rate differential can allow for near-daily rollover payments, so, like a dividend but more frequent. And as others crowd that side of the trade to buy the higher-yielding currency while selling the lower-yielder, a trend can develop in that direction, allowing for principal gains on top of the swap or rollover earned.

In USD/JPY this started back in 2021, well before the Fed started hiking rates. The simple act of US CPI moving higher was enough to drive anticipation of eventual rate hikes from the Fed, which started to push the long side of the pair. When the Fed began to open the door to hikes in Q4 of 2021, USD/JPY got a boost; and another larger boost in March of 2022 as the Fed began to hike rates. This was the initial build of the carry trade and for USD/JPY, it drove the pair from below 105 in early-2021 to 150.00 in Q4 of 2022.

The carry trade was so logical and clear that other problems started to percolate. The Japanese Ministry of Finance worried about the repercussions of unchecked Yen-weakness, so they intervened in Q4 of that year to try to balance the matter. Because the move had become so incredibly one-sided the corresponding pullback was fast and aggressive with USD/JPY shedding more than 2400 pips in just a few short months. This was 50% of the prior bullish trend, and it held support in early 2023 as buyers jumped back on the long side of the pair, in the direction of the carry.

In November of that year, the same prior high was already back in-play at 151.95. And, again, worries began to show around the Japanese Ministry of Finance around the consequences of unchecked Yen-weakness. And much like we saw the year before a sell-off developed with that price holding as the yearly high. But this time the sell-off was less severe as price only retraced 23.6% of the 2021-2022 major move.

 

USD/JPY Weekly Chart

Chart prepared by James Stanley, USD/JPY on Tradingview

 

2024

 

As we came into 2024 it was still unclear as to whether the Fed would be able to cut rates, as this is something that would have a direct impact on the interest rate differential between Japan and the U.S. and in-turn, the carry trade.

We can see USD/JPY price action mirroring rate cut hopes or expectations in the US quite well earlier in the year. As inflation remained high, USD/JPY pushed right back up to the same 151.95 level that had held the highs for the prior two years. In April, just after an above-expected US CPI release, USD/JPY broke out above that price, setting a fresh 33-year high in the process.

It didn’t take long for USD/JPY to ascend to the next major psychological level of 160.00, which was in-play just a few weeks later. But, again, worries from the Japanese Finance Ministry drove an intervention that entailed USD-selling and JPY-buying from the Bank of Japan in effort of producing a reversal in the pair.

That’s when the 151.95 level came in as support. And then bulls did the same thing they had done for much of the prior three years, they priced in the direction of the rate differential. In June USD/JPY was back above the 160.00 level again, and that strength held into July.

 

USD/JPY Daily Chart

Chart prepared by James Stanley, USD/JPY on Tradingview

 

Carry Comes Undone

 

It was the morning of July 11th when matters began to unravel. That was the morning of a US CPI print and this time, the data came in below expectations. This gave hope that the Fed would actually be able to cut rates and along with that would be rate compression between the US and Japan, a factor that would not be positive for carry traders on the long side of the pair.

But that didn’t seem to be enough for the Bank of Japan as they also intervened that morning. And while prior intervention efforts fell flat as carry traders were there to buy support and push the bullish trend, this time there was the worry that the carry trade was over.

And when you have a crowded trade that’s starting to unwind, the smelling smoke in the crowded movie theater example comes to mind, where you might not want to wait around as the exit door is only so wide.

USD/JPY showed an aggressive sell-off that spanned into August and along the way global equities took a major hit as well, with many fingers being pointed at the Bank of Japan and the unwind of the carry trade as a culprit behind the volatility. But what doesn’t match in that scenario is the fact that the S&P 500 hit a fresh high the week after the CPI print, after USD/JPY had started to reverse. So while the unwind of the carry may have removed some leverage from global equity markets, it’s unlikely that it was the sole culprit of the sell-off.

Now on to the surprise: In the month of September as the Fed was preparing to cut rates, the move in USD/JPY had started to stall. There was one single morning of tests below the 140.00 handle, but like we saw in the US Dollar in Q4, a massive reversal developed; and for USD/JPY, that entailed a 76.4% retracement of the July-September sell-off.

I’m surprised at how aggressively that move priced-in, and the degree to which the sell-off had retraced. I was expecting carry unwind to come back on a re-test of the 150.00 level, or perhaps even the 151.95 price. But that didn’t happen as the post-election run in the Greenback simply drove the USD and related pairings to fresh highs.

But, with that said, this story isn’t over yet, and USD/JPY remains a hot button for 2025 trade, especially if the US Dollar is going to remain within its longer-term mean-reverting backdrop. It was the 140.00 level that stifled sellers in September, leading to the reversal that showed in Q4. And that’s the area that bears will need to take-out if they want to drive a larger reversal in the pair while unwinding the carry trade that built into and around the FOMC’s rate hike campaign of 2022 and 2023.

 

USD/JPY Daily Chart

Chart prepared by James Stanley, USD/JPY on Tradingview

 

--- written by James Stanley, Senior Strategist

This report is intended for general circulation only. It should not be construed as a recommendation, or an offer (or solicitation of an offer) to buy or sell any financial products. The information provided does not take into account your specific investment objectives, financial situation or particular needs. Before you act on any recommendation that may be contained in this report, independent advice ought to be sought from a financial adviser regarding the suitability of the investment product, taking into account your specific investment objectives, financial situation or particular needs.

StoneX Financial Pte. Ltd., may distribute reports produced by its respective foreign entities or affiliates within the StoneX group of companies or third parties pursuant to an arrangement under Regulation 32C of the Financial Advisers Regulations. Where the report is distributed to a person in Singapore who is not an accredited investor, expert investor or an institutional investor (as defined in the Securities Futures Act), StoneX Financial Pte. Ltd. accepts legal responsibility to such persons for the contents of the report only to the extent required by law. Singapore recipients should contact StoneX Financial Pte. Ltd. at 6826 9988 for matters arising from, or in connection with the report.

In the case of all other recipients of this report, to the extent permitted by applicable laws and regulations neither StoneX Financial Pte. Ltd. nor its associated companies will be responsible or liable for any loss or damage incurred arising out of, or in connection with, any use of the information contained in this report and all such liability is hereby expressly disclaimed. No representation or warranty is made, express or implied, that the content of this report is complete or accurate.

StoneX Financial Pte. Ltd. is not under any obligation to update this report.

Trading CFDs and FX on margin carries a high level of risk that may not be suitable for some investors. Consider your investment objectives, level of experience, financial resources, risk appetite and other relevant circumstances carefully. The possibility exists that you could lose some or all of your investments, including your initial deposits. If in doubt, please seek independent expert advice. Visit www.cityindex.com/en-sg/terms-and-policies for the complete Risk Disclosure Statement.

ALL TRADING INVOLVES RISKS. LOSSES CAN EXCEED DEPOSITS.

City Index is a trading name of StoneX Financial Pte. Ltd. (“SFP”) for the offering of dealing services in Contracts for Differences (“CFD”). SFP holds a Capital Markets Services Licence issued by the Monetary Authority of Singapore for Dealing in Exchange-Traded Derivatives Contracts, Over-the-Counter Derivatives Contracts, and Spot Foreign Exchange Contracts for the Purposes of Leveraged Foreign Exchange Trading. SFP is also both Derivatives Trading and Clearing member of the Singapore Exchange (“SGX”). SFP is a wholly-owned subsidiary of StoneX Group Inc.

The information provided herein is intended for general circulation. It does not take into account the specific investment objectives, financial situation or particular needs of any particular person. You should take into account your specific investment objectives, financial situation or particular needs before making a commitment to invest, including seeking advice from an independent financial adviser regarding the suitability of the investment, under a separate engagement, as you deem fit. No representation or warranty is given as to the accuracy or completeness of this information. Consequently, any person acting on it does so entirely at their own risk.

The information does not represent an offer of, or solicitation for, a transaction in any investment product. Any views and opinions expressed may be changed without an update. To understand the risks and costs involved, please visit the section captioned “Important Information” and the “Risk Disclosure Statement”.

The information herein is not directed to, or intended for distribution to or use by, any person or entity who is a citizen or resident of or located in any locality, state, country or other jurisdiction where such distribution, publication, availability or use would be contrary to law or regulation.

StoneX Financial Pte. Ltd. 1 Raffles Place, #18-61, One Raffles Place Tower 2, Singapore 048616. Tel: 6309 1000. Co. Reg. No.: 201130598R.

This advertisement has not been reviewed by the Monetary Authority of Singapore.

© City Index 2025