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EUR/JPY
The EUR/JPY cross is currently navigating a period of high-stakes consolidation, oscillating in a narrow corridor around the 184.00 psychological level during the European session on Thursday, April 2, 2026. This sideways movement reflects a cautious "wait-and-see" approach from market participants as they weigh the diverging narratives from the European Central Bank (ECB) and the Bank of Japan (BoJ). In the Eurozone, the monetary policy outlook has been radically reshaped by the escalating conflict in the Middle East, which has driven oil prices higher and reintroduced significant upside risks to inflation. While the ECB held rates steady at its March 19 meeting, the discourse surrounding the upcoming April 30 session has turned decidedly hawkish. Influential policymakers, most notably Bundesbank President Joachim Nagel, have explicitly signaled that a rate hike in April is a "conceivable" option. Nagel’s stance is rooted in the fear that every day of sustained high energy prices threatens to unanchor medium-term inflation expectations, potentially forcing the central bank into a more restrictive posture than previously anticipated. Adding to this complex picture, Gediminas Simkus, the Governor of the Lithuanian central bank and an ECB Governing Council member, emphasized the need for extreme flexibility and caution on Thursday. While Simkus acknowledged that the rapidly changing geopolitical landscape requires the bank to stay nimble, he remained non-committal regarding specific policy actions for the April meeting, illustrating the internal debate between aggressive hawks and more data-dependent members. The ECBs own staff projections have already been revised upward, with headline inflation now expected to average 2.6% in 2026 due to the "Iran war" shock. This environment creates a difficult "stagflationary" trap for the Euro: higher rates may be needed to curb energy-driven price surges, yet those same hikes risk further dampening an already fragile economic growth outlook, currently projected at a modest 0.9% for the year.