The Philippine peso slid to a record low of 61.047 per US dollar as the Middle East conflict pushed oil prices higher. On Polymarket, the contract for a Bank of Japan rate decrease after the April 2026 meeting sits at
## Market reaction
The BOJ rate cut market has seen a small uptick in interest but remains extremely thin. The order book requires just $82 to move the price by 5 points, making it susceptible to sudden shifts. A YES share at
Separately, the market predicting silver prices hitting $200 by end of June could attract interest given oil-driven inflation fears, though no significant volume has traded on that contract yet.
## Why it matters
The peso’s depreciation is tied to rising oil prices from the Iran conflict, which increases import costs for the Philippines and pressures other oil-importing economies in the region. If these pressures persist, central banks across Asia face harder choices on rate policy. At 0.1%, the BOJ rate cut odds show traders are barely pricing in external pressures from the conflict, and confidence in a policy shift remains near zero.
## What to watch
Statements from BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda or board members hinting at any policy shift would be the most direct catalyst. Upcoming Japanese inflation and employment data will also shape whether traders start pricing in higher odds of a cut. Any escalation in the Middle East conflict that further spikes oil prices could widen the pressure on regional currencies beyond the peso.
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