BOJ policymaker signals chance of policy tweak early next year
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[August 30, 2023] By
Leika Kihara
KUSHIRO, Japan (Reuters) -Japan's inflation is "clearly in sight" of the
central bank's target, its board member Naoki Tamura said on Wednesday,
signaling the chance of an end to negative interest rates early next
year.
The remarks are the strongest signal to date by a Bank of Japan (BOJ)
policymaker that rising inflation and wages could prod the bank to take
bolder steps towards phasing out its radical stimulus.
"About a decade has passed since the BOJ began efforts to sustainably
and stably achieve its 2% inflation target. I feel that achievement of
this goal is now clearly in sight," Tamura said in a speech to business
leaders.
For now, the BOJ must sustain monetary easing to scrutinize wage and
price developments, said the former commercial banker.
"But I'm hoping that around January through March next year, we will
have further clarity" on whether Japan can sustainably meet the bank's
inflation target through wage and price data available by then, he said.
Although inflation already exceeds its 2% target, the BOJ has pledged to
maintain ultra-low interest rates until there is more evidence that the
level can be sustained.
"What's important is to act in a timely fashion so we're neither too
late nor too early," Tamura told a briefing later on Wednesday, adding
the pace and order of an exit would depend on economic conditions
falling into place for normalizing policy, Tamura said.
"Abandoning negative rates will obviously be among options" if the BOJ
were to normalize policy, he said. "Even if the BOJ were to end negative
rates, it won't be scaling back monetary easing as long as it can keep
interest rates low."
Japanese government bond (JGB) yields rose on Tamura's remarks as
investors saw them as less dovish than those by Governor Kazuo Ueda, who
said last week that Japan's underlying inflation was "still a bit below
our target."
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A man walks at the headquarters of Bank
of Japan in Tokyo, Japan, January 18, 2023. REUTERS/Issei Kato/File
Photo
While Tamura is considered by markets as a hawk within the BOJ's
nine-member board, his remarks suggest that discussions on the
timing for dismantling the bank's radical stimulus will intensify in
coming months.
In a sign there is no consensus on how soon the BOJ should phase out
stimulus, Deputy Governor Shinichi Uchida said earlier this month
there was still a long way to go before the BOJ can abandon negative
interest rates.
Under yield curve control (YCC), the BOJ guides short-term interest
rates at -0.1% and the 10-year bond yield around 0% as part of
efforts to sustainably achieve its 2% inflation target.
With its heavy-handed defense of the yield cap drawing criticism for
distorting market pricing and fuelling unwelcome yen falls, the BOJ
last month took steps to allow long-term rates to rise more
reflecting higher inflation.
The central bank described last month's action as aimed at making
YCC more sustainable, though markets saw it as another step toward
dialing back its massive stimulus program.
There is no market consensus on how soon the BOJ could ditch or
tweak YCC. Analysts polled by Reuters expect the BOJ to start
scaling back stimulus only in a year's time.
Japan's core consumer inflation stayed above the central bank's 2%
target in July for the 16th straight month, as firms kept passing on
higher import costs to households.
Governor Ueda has stressed the need to keep ultra-loose policy until
inflation is driven more by robust domestic demand accompanied by
sustained wage growth.
(Reporting by Leika Kihara; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman and
Sam Holmes)
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