The
data suggests any recovery in Japan's economy will be fragile as
state of emergency curbs rolled out last month hurt consumption
and heighten fears of another recession.
Japan's M3 money stock - or currency in circulation and deposits
at financial institutions - rose 7.8% in January from a year
earlier, marking the biggest increase on record, Bank of Japan
data showed. The rise topped a 7.6% gain in December.
Bank deposits jumped 15.5% in January, while cash in circulation
grew 5.7%, the data showed.
Companies have been piling up money from subsidies and loans
they took as a precaution against the health crisis, while
households are holding back on spending due to the third wave of
infections.
While lending by cash-strapped firms has peaked, the
government's decision to impose new state of emergency curbs
from January to prevent the spread of the virus has clouded the
outlook for the world's third-largest economy.
The BOJ eased monetary policy twice last year to cushion the
economic blow from COVID-19, including by creating a new lending
facility aimed at channeling funds to cash-strapped firms via
financial institutions.
(Reporting by Leika Kihara; Editing by Sam Holmes)
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