The Bank of Japan may have limited tools to deal with the weak yen, but that’s not its focus

The Bank of Japan may have limited tools to deal with the weak yen, but that’s not its focus


The Bank of Japan may be limited in its ability to deal with recent weakness in the yen, but experts who spoke with CNBC noted the currency is not really the central bank’s main focus anyway.

The Japanese yen went above 130 against the dollar on Thursday after the BOJ reiterated its ultra-easy monetary policy stance, a stark contrast to peers in other developed economies where central banks have expressed concerns over inflation.

As of Friday afternoon during Asia trading hours, the Japanese currency traded at 130.21 per dollar, a sharp weakening from levels near 115 it was trading at against the greenback in early March.

The exchange rate is not in the mandate of Bank of Japan.

Takatoshi Ito

Former Japanese deputy vice minister of finance

The yen has for weeks weakened sharply against the greenback as the monetary policy outlook between Japan and the U.S. continues to diverge.

On Thursday, the Japanese central bank vowed to buy unlimited amounts of bonds daily to defend its yield target.

In contrast, the U.S. Federal Reserve’s leader has affirmed the central bank’s determination to take aggressive action against inflation. The CME FedWatch tool shows markets largely expect a 50-basis-point rate hike in May.

“Many people are talking in that context where the BOJ might be tweaking their … policy framework,” said Kazuo Momma, executive economist at Mizuho Research & Technologies. “I think it is inconceivable or very difficult for the BOJ to do anything about that.”

Firstly, the differential between Japanese and U.S. rates will remain “huge” even if the BOJ decides to “tweak a little bit of the interest rate,” Momma said.

Furthermore, any move in the Bank of Japan’s yield curve control policy could wind up being counterproductive and introduce market speculation regarding the central bank’s next moves, he warned. Yield curve control is a BOJ policy meant to stimulate the country’s economy by keeping the 10-year Japanese government bond yield at around 0%.

“Just one move will be very dangerous step for the BOJ to do so … they’re cautious about sending any message to responding to the market pressure,” Momma said. “They’re going to continue to send a strong signal that they will be staying the same in terms of yield curve control.”

Meanwhile, two experts told CNBC that the Bank of Japan had made the “right move” as its current mandate is to help the economy reach an ever-elusive inflation target.

“The exchange rate is not in the mandate of Bank of Japan,” said Takatoshi Ito, who formerly served as Japan’s deputy vice minister of finance. Concerns about yen weakness should be dealt with by Japan’s finance ministry instead, he said.

“The interest rate yes has a impact on the exchange rate but it has also impact on [capital expenditure] and housing loans, the mortgage and other long-term assets,” said Ito, who is currently a professor of international and public affairs at Columbia University. “It’s a very indirect way to have the impact on the exchange rate.”

Agreeing with Ito, RMB Capital’s Masakazu Hosomi said the Bank of Japan’s current policy stance is in line with its focus of fighting deflation.

Since 2016, the Japanese central bank has adopted negative interest rates in an attempt to reverse decades of deflation through encouraging borrowing and spending. Those efforts have had had limited impact in reaching the BOJ’s 2% inflation goal, preventing it from raising interest rates.

“The biggest issue in Japan has been deflation, not inflation, unlike U.S. and Europe,” said Hosomi, a partner and portfolio manager at the firm.

Stock picks and investing trends from CNBC Pro:



Source

Stock futures are little changed after S&P 500, Nasdaq pullback from record highs: Live updates
World

Stock futures are little changed after S&P 500, Nasdaq pullback from record highs: Live updates

Traders work during the Alliance Laundry Holdings Inc. initial public offering (IPO) on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, US, on Thursday, Oct. 9, 2025. Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images Stock futures are little changed after both the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite closed lower following […]

Read More
An AI stock showing a classic uptrend that investors should ride for as long as possible
World

An AI stock showing a classic uptrend that investors should ride for as long as possible

As cloud plays like Arista Networks, Inc. (ANET) have continued to impress, there have been numerous calls for an end to the relentless uptrend. But using a classic trend-following toolkit, we see this chart as “innocent until proven guilty.” Today we’ll break down why this chart remains in a bullish configuration, review some of the […]

Read More
Ex-Google CEO Eric Schmidt warns AI models can be hacked: ‘They learn how to kill someone’
World

Ex-Google CEO Eric Schmidt warns AI models can be hacked: ‘They learn how to kill someone’

Google’s former CEO Eric Schmidt spoke at the Sifted Summit on Wednesday 8, October. Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images Google‘s former CEO Eric Schmidt has issued a stark reminder about the dangers of AI and how susceptible it is to being hacked. Schmidt, who served as Google’s chief executive from 2001 to 2011, warned […]

Read More