The USD/JPY pair rebounds nearly 140 pips from the weekly low touched during the first half of the European session on Friday and now trades just above the 131.00 mark.
Reports that the Japanese government is likely to appoint Kazuo Ueda as the next Bank of Japan (BoJ) governor boost the domestic currency and prompt aggressive intraday selling around the USD/JPY pair. The initial market reaction, however, fades rather quickly after the possible BoJ governor candidate Ueda said that the current policy is appropriate and added they need to continue the easy policy. This, in turn, undermines the Japanese Yen (JPY), which, along with the emergence of fresh US Dollar buying, assists the pair to rebound swiftly from the 129.80 region.
The USD continues to draw support from diminishing odds for an imminent pause in the Fed's policy tightening cycle. The expectations were lifted by the recent hawkish remarks by several FOMC officials, including Fed Chair Jerome Powell, stressing the need for additional interest rate hikes this week to fully gain control of inflation. This, in turn, pushes the US Treasury bond yields higher, which, in turn, benefits the greenback. That said, looming recession risks lend some support to the safe-haven JPY and keep a lid on further gains for the USD/JPY pair.
Even from a technical perspective, failure to find bearish acceptance below the 130.00 psychological mark and the subsequent bounce warrant caution before positioning for any further decline. That said, a strong follow-through buying is needed to support prospects for an extension of the recent recovery from the 127.20 area, or a multi-month low touched in January. Traders now look to the Preliminary Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index from the US, which, along with Fed Governor Christopher Waller's speech, might provide some impetus to the USD/JPY pair.