The
first test will come on Wednesday when BOJ Deputy Governor
Shinichi Uchida will deliver a speech and hold a news conference
at the northern Japan city of Hakodate.
A career central banker with deep knowledge of the BOJ's
monetary settings, Uchida is seen as a mastermind of the bank's
rate hike path and communication.
In a speech in February, Uchida set out the BOJ's plan on how to
unwind a complex set of stimulus measures that laid the
groundwork for its decision a month later to end negative
interest rates and bond yield control.
"Given the latest market rout, Uchida is likely to offer a
message aimed at soothing market jitters about the BOJ's rate
hike path," said former BOJ board member Takahide Kiuchi.
BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda is also likely to attend a special
parliament session to be convened later this month to discuss
the market rout, a government source said.
Senior officials from the ruling and main opposition parties
agreed on Tuesday to convene the lower house financial affairs
committee session, where Ueda will be asked to speak, the source
said, confirming an earlier report by Japan's Jiji news agency.
It was not clear when exactly the session will be held. Japan's
government spokesperson could not be immediately contacted.
The BOJ raised interest rates last week to levels unseen in 15
years and signaled its readiness to hike borrowing costs further
on growing prospects that inflation will durably hit its 2%
target backed by solid wage growth.
The move, coupled with weak U.S. data that stoked fears of a
recession in the world's largest economy, led to a global market
rout with Japan's Nikkei average suffering on Monday its worst
selloff since the 1987 Black Monday crash.
The Nikkei soared more than 8% to above 34,000 in the opening
minutes of trading on Tuesday, rebounding sharply from the
previous day's 12.4% plunge.
(Reporting by Leika Kihara and Yoshifumi Takemoto; Additional
reporting by Satoshi Sugiyama; Editing by Himani Sarkar and
Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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