MISSION BRIEF
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In the week ending May 6, the Federal Reserve's custody account — the account where it holds Treasury securities on behalf of foreign central banks and sovereign institutions — dropped by $8.7 billion in a single week, falling to $2.73 trillion, the first decline in a month. Japan's Ministry of Finance had just spent an estimated $54.7 billion buying yen in the open market. The timing was not a coincidence.
Japan has been at war with its own currency since April 30, when the yen cracked 160 per dollar — a level Tokyo had been defending publicly for weeks — and the Ministry of Finance authorized its first yen-buying operation since July 2024. A second round followed on May 6, a Japanese holiday, when the yen spiked again in thin liquidity. Two rounds. Ten trillion yen deployed. And somewhere in that operation, U.S. Treasuries moved.
Japan's Treasury holdings fell from $1.239 trillion in February to $1.192 trillion in March — a $47 billion drawdown in a single month — according to TIC data released May 18. That's the largest monthly decline since Japan was last in the intervention business. The April data won't print until June 18. By then, the full scale of what Tokyo moved will be visible. For now, the Fed's custody figures are the only real-time window into the operation.
As of this morning, USD/JPY is trading at 159.43 — less than 60 basis points below the 160 level that triggered two rounds of intervention last month. Tokyo spent $63 billion to push the yen away from that line. The yen is back at that line. The Ministry of Finance has not said a word.
Five years from now, there are going to be two types of retirees in America.
One is greeting strangers at Walmart in a blue vest. Not because they want to. Because the war in Iran was the first domino that knocked their retirement sideways and they never saw it coming.
The other is sitting on a beach with a margarita. Not because they got lucky. Because they understood what the Iran war was really about and made one simple move.
Here's what most people are missing.
The war in Iran isn't about nukes. It's about oil being sold in yuan instead of dollars.
Every barrel that leaves the dollar system makes your savings worth less. And 40 countries are following Iran's lead.
The retiree at Walmart kept everything in the same 401(k) their advisor set up ten years ago. They watched the dollar weaken. They watched inflation eat their savings. They hoped somebody in Washington would fix it. Nobody did.
The retiree on the beach moved a portion of their retirement into the one asset that goes up when the dollar goes down. Took 15 minutes. No taxes. No penalties. And they slept fine while everyone else panicked.
Same starting point. Same savings. One decision made the difference.
A free report called "The Great Gold Reset" shows you exactly what the Iran war means for your dollars, why it's accelerating a shift that was already underway, and the simple move that separates the Walmart greeters from the beach retirees.
THE OPERATION
Yen defense. Treasury bleed.
The mechanics of a yen-buying intervention are straightforward on paper — Japan's Ministry of Finance directs the Bank of Japan, its executing agent, to sell dollars and buy yen in the open market — but the funding chain runs straight through the U.S. Treasury market. Japan holds its foreign reserves primarily in dollar-denominated assets, most of them Treasuries, and when the ministry needs dollars to sell, those securities are the tap. The Bank of America research team estimated a $70 billion deterioration in supply-demand conditions for Treasuries tied to the April-May operations. That supply hit the market at exactly the moment yields were already being pushed higher by surging oil prices and Iran-war fiscal concerns.
The 10-year yield touched 4.70% on May 20 — a 16-month high — before retreating this week to 4.45% as early signals of a U.S.-Iran memorandum of understanding steadied the energy picture. That 25-basis-point move in nine days is not a rounding error. It is the difference between a mortgage market that is tightening and one that is stable, and it happened while most of the financial press was focused on whether the ceasefire would hold.
Japan's oil import bill widens every month the Iran war sustains elevated crude prices — which pressures the yen lower, which forces more intervention, which requires more Treasury sales, which pushes U.S. yields higher, which strengthens the dollar against the yen, which pressures the yen lower. Treasury Secretary Bessent visited Tokyo last week. He had warned his Japanese counterparts earlier this year that large-scale Treasury selling would spill over into U.S. markets. The visit happened after $47 billion had already moved.
Goldman Sachs estimates Japan has enough remaining firepower for roughly 30 more intervention rounds — approximately 150 trillion yen — but no one in the market believes Tokyo will deploy more than a fraction of that without U.S. political cover it may not get. The Treasury Department added Japan to its currency monitoring list in the same reporting cycle. Japan is spending dollars to defend the yen, and Washington is watching the dollar flow out.
RULES OF ENGAGEMENT
Your exposure
The yen closed Thursday at 159.43 per dollar. Intervention was triggered at 160.00. The Bank of Japan held rates steady this week and cut its 2026 growth forecast to 0.5% — half what it projected before the war started — which removes the one catalyst that could have strengthened the yen organically. Speculators are already rebuilding short positions. Tokyo has 30 rounds left in the magazine, Washington is watching the trigger, and the 10-year is one sustained yen move away from testing 4.70% again.
Japan remains the largest foreign holder of U.S. Treasuries at $1.19 trillion — more than China, more than the U.K., more than any other single sovereign — and it is now in a position where holding those Treasuries costs it more every time the yen weakens, because a weaker yen means larger oil import bills denominated in dollars, which means more intervention, which means more selling. The official foreign sector sold a net $14.9 billion in long-term Treasuries in March alone, according to the TIC release dated May 18. Private demand absorbed the difference that month. There is no guarantee private demand absorbs the next round.
