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Japan Just Spent A Record $73.6 Billion To Prop Up The Yen

Published May 30, 2026
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Summary:
  • Japan spent 11.73 trillion yen ($73.6 billion) from April 28 to May 27 to support the yen.
  • It was the country's first move into the market since 2024, and the biggest one-month effort on record.
  • The yen had slipped past 160 per dollar before Japan stepped in.

Japan just spent $73.6 billion in one month. The goal was to keep its own money from falling. That is the most it has ever spent in one stretch to do it.

What Japan Did

When a currency falls too far, a government can fight back. It buys up its own money. Japan calls this move an "intervention."

Japan had not done this since 2024. But the yen slipped past 160 per dollar. And that was the line that pulled it back in.

The spending ran from April 28 to May 27. In all, Japan used 11.73 trillion yen. That's about $73.6 billion, a bigger one-month push than any on record.

Big currency moves like this decide what you pay for imported goods and how global markets open. Market Briefs breaks it all down every morning in five minutes, plus a free investing masterclass when you sign up.

Why The Yen Keeps Sinking

Two forces work against Japan at once. The first is the gap in interest rates. The U.S. pays a lot more to hold its money. So investors keep moving cash into the dollar. And they keep pulling it out of the yen.

Japan's own rate sits low, near 0.75%. The U.S. holds its rate far above that, near 3.75%. That wide gap is the engine pulling money out of the yen.

The second force is oil. The war involving Iran has pushed crude higher. And a higher oil price makes the dollar stronger still.

Think of it like bailing water out of a boat. Someone keeps pouring more back in.

What A Weak Yen Does

A weak yen is not just a market story. It hits regular people too.

Japan buys most of its energy and food from abroad. A weak yen makes all of that cost more. So prices at the store climb.

The pain spreads to companies too. Importers pay more for the parts and fuel they bring in.

That's the real reason the government stepped in. A falling yen quietly taxes every home.

Does Spending $73.6 Billion Even Work?

A step like this can slow a fall. But it rarely turns one around on its own.

The reason is size. Currency markets trade trillions of dollars a day. So even a record $73.6 billion is a bucket against the tide.

The last time Japan stepped in was 2024. It spent big back then too. The yen kept sliding anyway once the spending stopped.

What the money buys is time. Time for the rate gap to shrink. Or time for oil to cool off.

Neither one is in Tokyo's hands. That's why traders watch the next intervention, not this one.

What To Watch

The yen's exact level matters less than the next slip.

Japan just showed it will spend big to defend 160. So the market's next move is to test whether it will do it again.

Sign up for Market Briefs to get the global money story every weekday morning, with a 45-minute investing course included as a bonus.

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