Japanese government bonds also fell on the news.
The selloff came after a period of rising expectations. Katayama's comments had led some traders to think GPIF would soon increase its domestic stock and bond holdings. The Reuters report killed that hope.
Japanese authorities have already shown they will act to slow the yen's fall. Earlier in 2026, they intervened with a record ¥11.73 trillion ($72.3 billion) after the yen first broke past 160 per dollar.
Why GPIF Won't Shift Quickly
GPIF is the $1.8 trillion pension fund. It does not make changes based on political pressure. Altering the fund's strategic asset allocation necessitates a structured review, not a government order. Legally, the fund must base its investment choices on the goal of achieving durable, long-term gains for retirees.
Get the market news that matters in a five-minute read with Market Briefs, our free daily newsletter
Additionally, it narrowed the permitted drift from its benchmarks to between five and six percentage points, based on asset class performance, down from a prior range of six to eight percentage points.
Asymmetric Advisors strategist Amir Anvarzadeh put it bluntly: "There's no way GPIF will sacrifice its discipline because the government thinks it's a good idea." He added that dollar-yen "may be on the cusp of a big breakout."
Japanese government bonds face additional pressure from Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's expansive fiscal and investment initiatives, along with views that she favors loose monetary policy. The Reuters report, which dashed expectations of a shift, added to the pressure on JGBs.
The yen's weakness is rooted in persistent macroeconomic forces beyond any single fund's portfolio. Wide interest-rate differentials between Japan and the United States, ongoing geopolitical uncertainties, and concerns over Japan's fiscal health have all weighed on the currency. The Bank of Japan's cautious pace of rate normalization has offered little support, while the U.S. Federal Reserve remains on hold, keeping the yield gap wide. Against this backdrop, even a hypothetical GPIF rebalancing would provide only a modest and temporary lift to the yen.
What Gradual Shift Could Look Like
Even without a formal change, GPIF has room to tilt its portfolio. The permitted deviation bands allow it to drift toward domestic assets over time. The fund could also adjust day-to-day rebalancing practices.
Mizuho Bank's senior currency strategist in London, Masayuki Nakajima, explained: "Even if the likelihood of an immediate large-scale portfolio revision remains low, markets are likely to continue focusing on the possibility of a gradual shift toward domestic assets through greater use of the permitted deviation bands or changes in day-to-day rebalancing practices."
Worth Noting
The yen remains under pressure from wide interest-rate differentials, geopolitical risks, and fiscal concerns. The Bank of Japan's perceived slow rate hikes only add to the weakness. For now, GPIF's discipline keeps the fund on its current course. No political push will change that - at least not today.
Join Market Briefs, our free daily newsletter, for a quick daily rundown of the markets
