BOJ
likely to debate possibility of easing in April: sources
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[April 05, 2016]
By Leika Kihara and Sumio Ito
TOKYO (Reuters) - Bank of Japan
policymakers will likely debate the possibility of easing monetary
policy further at a rate review this month, as a raft of gloomy data
threatens their scenario that a moderate economic recovery will
accelerate inflation towards a 2 percent target, sources familiar with
their thinking said.
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If the central bank were to act, it would more likely increase asset
purchases than cut interest rates, the sources said, as financial
institutions are still scrambling to adjust to a negative rate
policy deployed in January.
But a decision on whether to ease at the April 27-28 review will be
a close call as many BOJ officials are wary of using their limited
policy tools again so soon, especially as the negative rate move has
proved unpopular among the public.
"It will be a question of whether the BOJ feels it has forestalled
risks in January or whether they feel that January's action wasn't
enough," said one of the people familiar with the BOJ's thinking.
The BOJ stunned markets in January by adding negative interest rates
to its massive asset-buying program, dubbed "quantitative and
qualitative easing," to forestall the risk of external headwinds
derailing a fragile economic recovery.
But the move failed to boost stock prices or arrest an unwelcome yen
rise, drawing criticism from lawmakers and investors as confusing
rather than calming markets.
WEAK DATA DEEPENS DILEMMA
A slew of weak data has since kept the BOJ on edge.
Business sentiment soured and corporate inflation expectations
weakened in January-March, the BOJ's "tankan" survey showed, casting
doubt on the bank's argument that aggressive money printing will
prompt firms to boost spending in anticipation of future price
rises.
Japanese stock prices have slumped on investors' concerns that
sluggish emerging market demand and the yen's rebound will hurt
corporate profits, threatening to undermine the BOJ's efforts to
brighten public sentiment with bold monetary action.
BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda has insisted that Japan's economic
recovery remains intact, and blamed sharp declines in oil prices for
keeping inflation roughly flat.
While many BOJ officials agree with Kuroda that Japan's fundamentals
remain solid, some worry the economy is losing the momentum needed
to push up inflation as weak exports and household spending threaten
to tip Japan into recession.
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Sources have told Reuters that the BOJ is likely to slash its
inflation forecasts in a quarterly review to be conducted at the
April meeting, and push back the timing for hitting its 2 percent
target.
That will heighten pressure on the BOJ to ease again.
But many board members are hesitant of doing so now, with some
openly questioning the merits of pushing down already low borrowing
costs with unconventional policy steps.
Kuroda told parliament on Tuesday that financial market moves would
be among key factors in deciding whether to act, suggesting the
likelihood of an April easing may depend on how the yen and stock
prices perform ahead of the meeting.
"We need to take a comprehensive look at various factors in deciding
(the best mix of steps) at the time, including market moves,
particularly those in Japan," Kuroda said.
(Reporting by Leika Kihara and Sumio Ito, with additional reporting
by Yoshifumi Takemoto; Editing by Ian Geoghegan)
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