BOJ Kuroda's optimism on economy, price outlook sends
yen to 4-month high
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[January 15, 2018]
By Leika Kihara and Stanley White
TOKYO (Reuters) - Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda offered a
positive view on the economy and inflation on Monday, sending the yen to
a four-month high against the dollar on simmering speculation it may
exit its ultra-loose monetary policy earlier than expected.
Financial markets ignored Kuroda's reminder that the BOJ will maintain
its massive stimulus in a sign of how nervous investors have become on
when it might follow the footsteps of other central banks in dialing
back crisis-mode stimulus.
The BOJ also offered its most optimistic view on regional areas of Japan
in nearly a decade in a quarterly report, underscoring its conviction a
broadening recovery will help accelerate inflation to its ambitious 2
percent target.
Kuroda said in a speech to BOJ regional branch managers that core
consumer inflation was "moving around 1 percent," a slight change from
three months ago when he said core consumer prices were around zero.
"The economy is expected to continue expanding moderately," he added,
reiterating his optimism on prospects for a sustained recovery.
The comments sent the dollar falling as low as 110.58 yen <JPY=>, as
some traders bought the yen on expectations the BOJ could dial back
stimulus earlier than expected - a view that heightened after a slight
cut in its debt purchases last week.
"Kuroda's change in language merely reflects recent price gains, but
people have become sensitive to even the subtlest difference since the
BOJ cut bond purchases," said Shuji Tonouchi, senior market economist at
Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities.
"Members of the government are also making more positive comments about
escaping deflation. Policymakers are gradually changing their tone."
Kuroda also said a moderate economic expansion now under way will help
accelerate inflation toward the BOJ's 2 percent target, signaling its
desire to maintain the status quo on monetary policy for the time being.
RECOVERY BROADENING
In the quarterly report, the BOJ raised its assessment for three of
Japan's nine regional economies and maintained its rosy view for the
remaining six regions.
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Bank of Japan (BOJ)
Governor Haruhiko Kuroda attends a news conference at the BOJ
headquarters in Tokyo, Japan, December 21, 2017. REUTERS/Issei Kato
The central bank said two regions were seeing their economies "expanding," the
first time it has used such an upbeat assessment for as many regions since April
2007.
Shinichi Uchida, head of the BOJ's Nagoya branch in central Japan, said
conditions for wage increases were falling into place as firms face intensifying
labor shortages.
"We're seeing some positive moves toward an end to deflation," Uchida told a
news conference, adding that companies were benefiting from robust domestic and
overseas demand.
Japan's economy grew an annualized 2.5 percent in July-September to mark a
seventh straight quarter of growth thanks to robust exports and capital
expenditure.
Core consumer prices in November rose 0.9 percent from a year earlier, far from
the BOJ's 2 percent target but posting the 11th straight month of gains,
offering policymakers some hope firms are finally starting to raise prices on
brightening prospects.
Japan's economy minister raised eyebrows last week when he talked up the
government's progress in reflating the economy and suggested it is possible to
declare an end to deflation before consumer prices reach the BOJ's inflation
target.
Given the rising cost of prolonged easing, such as the hit to bank profits from
ultra-low interest rates, the BOJ has been sending subtle yet intentional hints
it could edge away from crisis-mode policy earlier than expected.
But a small cut to its regular bond purchases last week pushed global yields and
the yen higher, underscoring the challenge the BOJ faces in communicating its
policy intentions.
"Japan's financial system remains stable and monetary conditions are very
accommodative," Kuroda said in the speech, holding off from repeating recent
warnings about the rising cost of ultra-easy policy.
(Editing by Chris Gallagher, Simon Cameron-Moore and Jacqueline Wong)
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