
GBPJPY is the ticker for the British pound quoted in Japanese yen. GBP is the currency code for the pound sterling, and JPY is the Japanese yen. The pair tells you how many yen one pound buys at any given moment. Traders call it "the Guppy" or, less affectionately, "the Beast," a nod to its reputation for outsized daily ranges.
GBPJPY is a cross pair, meaning its price is derived from the two underlying dollar legs, GBPUSD and USDJPY, rather than traded directly against the dollar. Both component currencies rank among the five most heavily traded in the global forex market according to the 2025 BIS Triennial Survey. GBPJPY itself recorded a daily average volume of $24 billion and a 0.3% share of total forex turnover, making it one of the most liquid cross pairs available.
The GBPJPY price is driven by 7 main factors: the BoE-BoJ interest rate differential, UK macroeconomic data, Japanese macroeconomic data, risk sentiment, energy prices, domestic politics on both sides, and BoJ intervention risk.
The interest rate differential is the anchor. The BoE bank rate sits at 3.75%, while the BoJ holds its policy rate at 0.75%, a spread of roughly 300 basis points in the pound's favour. That gap attracts carry trade capital into sterling and away from the yen, supporting GBPJPY. When the gap widens, the pair rises. When it narrows, carry positions unwind and the pair falls.
Risk sentiment acts as a persistent amplifier on GBPJPY because the pair absorbs pressure from both sides simultaneously.
The GBPJPY exchange rate quotes the number of Japanese yen required to buy one British pound. If the pair is trading at 210.00, one pound costs 210 yen. Because GBPJPY is a cross pair, its rate is derived from the two dollar legs: GBPUSD multiplied by USDJPY. The pair moves when either side of the equation changes. Rising demand for the pound drives the rate higher, while a strengthening yen drives it lower. Both forces act simultaneously, which is why GBPJPY reflects the relative strength between sterling and the yen at any given moment.
You trade GBPJPY by taking a leveraged long or short position on the pound-yen exchange rate, without holding either currency in a foreign bank account. Your profit or loss depends on whether you correctly predict the direction of the move.
You can open and close positions within the same trading day to capitalise on intraday exchange rate movements.
The key benefit of trading GBPJPY is the combination of a wide daily range, carry trade income, and cross-pair momentum that creates more pip-capture opportunities per session than most other forex pairs.
GBPJPY regularly moves 150 to 200+ pips in a single day. That's significantly more than EURUSD or even GBPUSD, and it means you don't need to sit around waiting for a setup. The pair trends hard when the BoE and BoJ are moving in opposite policy directions, and the 300 basis point rate differential generates meaningful swap income for traders holding long positions overnight. Because GBPJPY compounds the moves of two underlying dollar pairs, it amplifies directional momentum when GBPUSD and USDJPY are trending in the same direction relative to the pound, producing explosive runs that single-leg pairs don't deliver.
The key risk specific to GBPJPY is the pair's capacity for violent reversals driven by simultaneous shocks to both legs of the cross, producing drawdowns that exceed what traders positioned for a single catalyst would expect.
GBPJPY compounds volatility from two sources. A hawkish BoJ surprise that strengthens the yen can land on the same day as a weak UK data print that weakens the pound, and the resulting move hits both sides of the pair at once. The carry trade amplifies this dynamic. When risk sentiment shifts, leveraged short-JPY positions unwind simultaneously, producing cascading liquidations that accelerate the sell-off. The July-August 2024 episode showed what this looks like in practice, when a BoJ rate hike on 31 July triggered a global carry trade unwind that sent GBPJPY down over 1,000 pips in the days that followed. Japan's Ministry of Finance retains the authority to intervene directly in the yen, injecting event risk that has no equivalent on GBPUSD alone. Never hold through a BoJ or BoE announcement without a defined stop-loss.
The best time to trade GBPJPY is during the London session, from 07:00 to 16:00 UTC, with the highest concentration of volume during the London/New York overlap from 12:00 to 16:00 UTC.
GBPJPY stands out from other cross pairs because it generates meaningful liquidity during two distinct session windows. The Tokyo session (00:00 to 06:00 UTC) produces standalone volatility because the yen is its home currency. BoJ rate decisions, Japanese CPI releases, Tankan survey data, and Ministry of Finance intervention all land during this window. The Tokyo/London handover from 07:00 to 08:00 UTC then concentrates a second spike in volume as London desks reprice overnight moves. UK data releases from the ONS cluster at 07:00 UTC, giving GBPJPY two early-session catalysts that most cross pairs don't have.
The London/New York overlap from 12:00 to 16:00 UTC is peak liquidity. BoE policy announcements at 12:00 UTC on decision days and US data releases at 12:30 UTC add further layers of event-driven volume. Higher liquidity produces tighter spreads, faster execution, and lower slippage risk on every GBPJPY trade.
The GBPJPY trading strategies include trend following, carry trading, dual-leg momentum trading, event-driven trading, and scalping.
Trend following uses moving average crossovers or directional indicators (MACD, ADX) to ride extended moves driven by BoE-BoJ policy divergence. GBPJPY's wide daily range sustains multi-week trends that reward trend-following systems when the rate differential is widening or narrowing consistently.
Carry trading captures the yield differential by holding a long GBPJPY position and collecting the interest rate spread between the higher-yielding pound and the lower-yielding yen. The strategy generates passive income during periods of stable or widening rate differentials but requires active risk management around BoJ decisions and risk-off episodes that trigger rapid yen appreciation.
Dual-leg momentum trading monitors GBPUSD and USDJPY simultaneously and enters GBPJPY when both legs are trending in the same direction relative to the pound. When GBPUSD is rising and USDJPY is also rising, the combined effect produces an explosive GBPJPY move to the upside. The reverse setup works for shorts. This strategy exploits the cross-pair amplification effect that makes GBPJPY unique.
Event-driven trading centres on the BoE's "Super Thursday" releases, BoJ rate decisions, UK ONS data at 07:00 UTC, Japanese CPI and Tankan data during the Tokyo session, and US nonfarm payrolls at 12:30 UTC. GBPJPY reacts to scheduled releases from three economies (UK, Japan, and US), giving event-driven traders more setups per month than single-leg pairs.
Scalping operates on the 1-minute or 5-minute chart during the London/New York overlap (12:00 to 16:00 UTC), where GBPJPY's compressed spreads and high volume support rapid entries and exits using momentum oscillators (RSI, Stochastic).
You can start trading GBPJPY directly from this page. The live chart above shows the real-time pound-yen exchange rate, and the Trade Now button takes you to the account opening process.
To place your first GBPJPY trade on TMGM, follow these five steps:
TMGM displays a bid and ask price for GBPJPY. The gap between them is the spread, which is applied to your position at entry. Track your open trade on the live chart and move your stop-loss as the price develops.
The minimum deposit to start trading GBPJPY on TMGM is $100. The total capital you need depends on your position size, leverage ratio, and margin requirement.
GBPJPY margin is calculated by dividing the position value by the leverage ratio. For example, if GBPJPY is trading at 210.00 and you open a 0.01 lot position (1,000 GBP), the position value is approximately $1,320 (at a GBPUSD rate of 1.3200) and the required margin at 1:500 leverage is $2.64. Increasing your position size or reducing the leverage ratio raises the margin needed to enter and maintain the trade.
Your account balance should also cover the spread cost at entry and retain enough free margin to withstand price swings without triggering a margin call. GBPJPY's wide daily range means you need more breathing room than you would on a tighter pair like EURUSD. Limiting risk to no more than 1% of your account balance per trade provides room to hold multiple positions and absorb short-term moves against your direction.
Trade GBPJPY on MT4, MT5 with TMGM.
Open a Forex trading accountOr try our free demo account (no deposit required).




