BOJ to weigh rate hike next week, detail plan to halve bond buying, Reuters reports

BOJ to weigh rate hike next week, detail plan to halve bond buying, Reuters reports


The flag of Japan flutters at the Bank of Japan headquarters in Tokyo on Dec. 19, 2023.

Kazuhiro Nogi | AFP | Getty Images

The Bank of Japan is likely to debate whether to raise interest rates when it meets next week and unveil a plan to roughly halve bond purchases in coming years, sources said, signaling its resolve to steadily unwind its massive monetary stimulus.

The rate decision will depend on how long the board members prefer to wait for clarity on whether consumption will recover and keep inflation stably around the bank’s 2% target, said four people familiar with the BOJ’s thinking.

Over three-quarters of economists polled by Reuters expect the central bank to stand pat this month and possibly next move in September or October, but sources suggested the outcome of the July 30-31 meeting was considerably less certain.

“The decision will be a close call and a hard one to make,” given uncertainty over the consumption outlook, one of the sources said. “It’s really a judgment call, in terms of whether to act now or later this year,” another person said.

While the nine-member board broadly agrees on the need for a near-term rate hike, there is no consensus on whether it should happen next week or later in the year, they said.

Core inflation hit 2.6% in June, having exceeded the BOJ’s target for well over two years, and workers’ base pay rose by the most in three decades in May, enough to for hawks to argue that conditions are right to hike rates now.

However, recent weak consumption and household sentiment have helped policy doves make the case for holding off for now and waiting for more data to see whether tax cuts and rising wages will lift consumption as projected.

The outcome of next week’s meeting is uncertain in part because the BOJ sees no compelling reason to rush, with price rises still moderate and inflation expectations stable near 2%, the sources said.

“What’s clear is that the BOJ will probably raise rates in coming months. It’s just a question of timing,” one of them said.

BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda has said the central bank will hike rates if it is convinced that solid economic and wage growth will keep inflation around its 2% in coming years, as projected.

While consumer prices have been rising in Japan since the COVID-19 pandemic, avoiding extended spells of declining prices the economy has repeatedly experienced over the past three decades remains a concern for Japanese policymakers.

Having just ended negative rates in March, the BOJ still keeps short-term rates around zero. The next rate hike is expected to kick off a tightening cycle that will take rates to levels that neither cool nor stimulate growth – seen by analysts as somewhere around 0.5% to 1.5% – a process that could take several years.

“For the BOJ, there is still a long way to go. Another rate hike will still keep Japan’s monetary condition very loose,” a second source said, a view echoed by two more sources.

UBS: We're expecting the BOJ will decide to reduce government bond purchases

At this month’s meeting, the BOJ will also release details of a quantitative tightening plan on how it will taper its huge bond buying in the coming one to two years, and shrink its nearly $5 trillion balance sheet.

The BOJ is likely to taper its bond purchases gradually in several stages at a pace roughly in line with dominant market views, to avoid causing an unwelcome spike in yields, the sources said.

That heightens the chance the BOJ would roughly halve monthly bond purchases in 1-1/2 to two years’ time – a pace advocated by a sizeable number of participants in a meeting last week between the bank and financial institutions.

The BOJ ended eight years of negative rates and bond yield control in March, in a landmark shift away from its radical stimulus program.



Source

Amazon’s pricing controls may be anticompetitive, German regulator warns
World

Amazon’s pricing controls may be anticompetitive, German regulator warns

Packages with the logo of Amazon are transported at a packing station of a redistribution center of Amazon in Horn-Bad Meinberg, western Germany, on Dec. 9, 2024. Ina Fassbender | Afp | Getty Images German antitrust regulators warned Amazon on Monday that the company’s pricing mechanisms for third-party sellers could run afoul of competition laws. […]

Read More
Ukraine attack on Russian nuclear bombers overshadows peace talks in Turkey
World

Ukraine attack on Russian nuclear bombers overshadows peace talks in Turkey

The Russian and Ukrainian delegations leave after the second round of Ukraine-Russia peace talks at Ciragan Palace on June 2, 2025 at in Istanbul, Turkey. Chris Mcgrath | Getty Images News | Getty Images Peace talks between Russia and Ukraine in Istanbul ended barely an hour after they began on Monday, a day after a […]

Read More
UK put on a war footing with defense overhaul — but is it too little, too late?
World

UK put on a war footing with defense overhaul — but is it too little, too late?

Britain’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer (C), Britain’s Defence Secretary John Healey (2nd R) and managing director of BAE Systems’ naval ships business Simon Lister (R) visit the BAE Systems’Govan facility, in Glasgow, on June 2, 2025. Britain announced it will build 12 new attack submarines as it unveiled a major defense review to deal with […]

Read More