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						BOJ policymaker signals chance of future rate hike to 
						ease bank strains
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		 [November 07, 2018] 
		 By Leika Kihara 
 KOCHI, Japan (Reuters) - Higher long-term 
		interest rates could help financial institutions by widening their 
		margins, Bank of Japan board member Yukitoshi Funo said, signaling a 
		rate hike could be a future option to ease pressure on banks' profits 
		from prolonged policy easing.
 
 Funo, a former executive of Toyota Motor <7203.T>, said the central bank 
		has no plan to dial back its ultra-loose policy in the near-term as 
		global risks cloud prospects for hitting its elusive inflation goal.
 
 But he warned that the BOJ must be mindful of the risks that prolonged 
		stimulus could hurt financial institutions' profits and destabilize the 
		country's banking system.
 
 "Monetary policy is not the only factor affecting financial 
		institutions' profits," Funo told a news conference after meeting 
		business leaders in Kochi, western Japan, on Wednesday.
 
		
		 
		
 "But in general, a steeper yield curve would have a positive impact on 
		financial institutions because it would widen margins for them," he 
		said.
 
 The remarks contrast with those of BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda, who 
		said on Monday that higher yields would hurt financial institutions by 
		cooling the economy.
 
 Years of heavy money printing have failed to fire up inflation to the 
		BOJ's 2 percent target, forcing the central bank to maintain its massive 
		stimulus despite the rising cost such as the hit to bank profits from 
		near-zero rates.
 
 The BOJ has come under fire from financial institutions for keeping the 
		yield curve too flat with its policy of capping long-term interest rates 
		around zero percent.
 
 The central bank in July decided to allow long-term rates to move more 
		flexibly around its target. But the move has done little to push up 
		yields as investors expect subdued inflation to prevent the BOJ from 
		raising rates any time soon.
 
 As of March, 52 out of 106 regional banks have reported losses in the 
		past two years or more on their lending business, according to the 
		Financial Services Agency (FSA), highlighting the struggle to turn a 
		profit outside Japan's major cities.
 
 FOCUS ON GROWTH
 
 Despite the strain on banks, Funo said the BOJ's priority now was to 
		keep stimulating the economy, to give the government and companies time 
		to boost Japan's growth potential through structural reforms and 
		increased capital expenditure.
 
		
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			Newly-appointed Bank of Japan (BOJ) board member Yukitoshi Funo 
			arrives at his inauguration news conference at the BOJ headquarters 
			in Tokyo, July 1, 2015. REUTERS/Toru Hanai 
            
			 
"Given recent price developments, we will not whittle down our powerful monetary 
easing for the time being," he said.
 Funo also said that while Japan's economy is likely to continue expanding 
moderately, there were various uncertainties for the overseas economic outlook 
including escalating Sino-U.S. trade frictions.
 
 
The trade dispute will likely hurt China's economy more than that of the United 
States, Funo said.
 "The trade friction could potentially hurt Japanese business sentiment and 
investment via weakening Chinese growth," he said.
 
 "It's something we should not take our eyes off."
 
 Japan's core consumer prices rose 0.7 percent in September from a year earlier, 
remaining distant from the BOJ's target, despite a steady economic expansion and 
a tightening job market.
 
 Data on Wednesday showed inflation-adjusted real wages fell in September for a 
second straight month, as higher gasoline costs sap consumers' purchasing power.
 
 Heightening external risks also hang over the outlook for Japan's economy, with 
analysts now projecting a contraction in the third quarter.
 
 The BOJ's nine-member board is split between those who prefer to focus on 
keeping monetary policy ultra-loose, and those who fret about the rising cost of 
prolonged easing.
 
 (Reporting by Leika Kihara; Editing by Chris Gallagher and Sam Holmes)
 
				 
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