BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda portrayed the board's tightly-split
decision to buy more assets as a preemptive strike to keep policy on
track, rather than an admission that his plan to reflate the long
moribund-economy had derailed.
But some economists wondered if pushing even more money into the
financial system would be effective as long as consumer confidence
continues to worsen and demand remains weak.
"It's clearly a big surprise given Kuroda's repeated insistence that
policy was on track and assorted politicians have been warning about
the negative side of a weak yen currency," said Sean Callow, a
currency strategist at Westpac.
"We salute the BoJ for admitting that they weren't going to reach
their goals on inflation or GDP, though we do note that the new
policy equates to about $60 billion of quantitative easing per
month. This perspective does raise the question of just how much
impact monetary policy is having."
The jolt from the BOJ, which had been expected to maintain its level
of asset purchases, came as the government signaled its readiness to
ramp up spending to boost the economy and as the government pension
fund, the world's largest, was set to increase purchases of domestic
and foreign stocks.
"We decided to expand the quantitative and qualitative easing to
ensure the early achievement of our price target," Kuroda told a
news conference, reaffirming the BOJ's goal of pushing consumer
price inflation to 2 percent next year.
"Now is a critical moment for Japan to emerge from deflation.
Today's step shows our unwavering determination to end deflation."
Kuroda said the BOJ's easing was unrelated to major portfolio
changes by the Government Pension Investment Fund (GPIF) also
announced on Friday, but the effect of the day's two major decisions
means that the central bank will step up its buying of Japanese
government bonds, offsetting the giant pension fund's increased
sales of them.
The BOJ's move stands in marked contrast with the Federal Reserve,
which on Wednesday ended its own "quantitative easing," judging that
the U.S. economy had recovered enough to dispense with the emergency
flood of cash into its financial system.
In a rare split decision, the BOJ's board voted 5-4 to accelerate
purchases of Japanese government bonds so that its holdings increase
at an annual pace of 80 trillion yen ($723.4 billion), up by 30
trillion yen.
The central bank also said it would triple its purchases of
exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and real-estate investment trusts (REITs)
and buy longer-dated debt, sending Tokyo shares soaring and
prompting a sharp sell-off in the yen.
Kuroda said that while the economy continues to recover, plunging
oil prices, slowing global growth and weak household spending after
the tax hike were weighing on price growth.
"There was a risk that despite having made steady progress, we could
face a delay in eradicating the public's deflation mindset," he
said.
Before Friday's shock decision, Kuroda had been relentlessly
optimistic that the unprecedented monetary stimulus he unleashed 18
months ago would succeed in bolstering an economic recovery and
ending 15 years of falling prices.
But the world's third-largest economy has sputtered despite the
BOJ's asset purchases and earlier government spending.
Most economists polled by Reuters last week had expected the central
bank to ease policy again but not so soon. A majority had expected
it to move early next year.
The bank's previous failed effort to defeat deflation via
quantitative easing (QE) in the five years to 2006 failed.
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ECONOMY FLOUNDERING
Still, Economy Minister Akira Amari called the BOJ's easing a timely
move, saying the decision was related to but separate from Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe's looming decision on whether to raise the sales
tax again next October, which would help rein in hefty government
debt but risk a further economic blow.
In a semiannual report, the BOJ halved its growth forecast for the
fiscal year to March to 0.5 percent. It trimmed its CPI forecast for
fiscal 2014 and 2015, but still expects to meet its inflation target
within the two years it originally set out.
"This is very significant because it reasserts Kuroda's leadership
over the policy board, which was beginning to show open dissent,"
said Jesper Koll, director of research at JPMorgan Securities.
"It recognizes what we have known, that the real economy has been
weaker than expected, weaker than forecast, and reasserts that
Kuroda thinks they can do something about this."
The benchmark Nikkei stock index spiked to a 7-year high on the BOJ
bombshell and closed up 4.8 percent. The yen tumbled, with the
dollar climbing to 110.91 yen, its highest since 2008, from 109.34
before the announcement.
"It’s easy money, so financials, banks and securities, and real
estate stocks stand to benefit further," said Masayuki Doshida,
senior market analyst at Rakuten Securities.
In a reminder of the challenges the central bank faces, data earlier
on Friday showed annual core consumer inflation was 1 percent when
stripping out the effect of April's tax hike, half the BOJ's target.
Household spending fell for a six straight month in September from a
year earlier, while the job-availability rate eased from its 22-year
high in August.
Also on Friday, a Japanese government panel overseeing the GPIF
approved plans for the fund to raise its holding of domestic stocks
to 25 percent of its portfolio from the current 12 percent.
The $1.2-trillion GPIF is under pressure from Abe to shift funds
towards riskier, higher-yielding investments to support the
fast-ageing population, and away from low-yielding JGBs.
With Abe set to decide in December whether to raise the sales tax
next year to 10 percent from 8 percent, voices are growing for him
to delay the planned fiscal tightening, given the economy's
weakness.
Isamu Ueda, a senior official in Komeito, the junior party in Abe's
coalition, said on Friday it would be difficult to press ahead with
plans to raise the tax next year.
"I think conditions are severe for (raising the tax) next October,"
Ueda told reporters after a meeting of Komeito's economic revival
council, which he heads.
(Additional reporting by Stanley White, Hitoshi Ishida and Kaori
Kaneko; Editing by Kim Coghill)
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