BOJ's communication about-face may haunt future rate moves
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[August 08, 2024] By
Leika Kihara
TOKYO (Reuters) - The Bank of Japan managed to calm investor nerves
during global market turmoil this week by reversing a calibrated
strategy to communicate steady interest-rate rises, but the flip-flop
tests the bank's resolve to phase out decades of radical stimulus.
If the central bank, scarred by missteps and reversals going back a
quarter century, is at the mercy of markets, it may be constrained in
moving away from what it has called excessive support for the world's
fourth-biggest economy.
The yen spiked and Tokyo shares plummeted last week as the BOJ
unexpectedly raised its policy rate from essentially zero to the highest
in 15 years and Governor Kazuo Ueda signaled further steady rate hikes,
a path the central bank had been trying to suggest for months.
Ueda's influential deputy helped stabilize sentiment on Wednesday by
saying the BOJ would not raise rates when markets were unstable, but
confusion resumed on Thursday, when a summary of the discussion at the
bank's July 30-31 meeting showed policymakers focused on a series of
rate hikes to keep inflation from overshooting.
"The BOJ hiked interest rates because it didn't like the weak yen. Now
it appears to be suggesting a pause in rate hikes because it doesn't
like stocks falling," said Takuya Kanda, an analyst at Gaitame.com
Research Institute. "If the BOJ is watching markets so much in setting
policy, there's a chance it won't be able to raise rates that much."
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The Japanese currency skyrocketed on Monday and the Nikkei stock average
plunged the most since 1987 after the BOJ raised its short-term policy
target to 0.25% from a zero-to-0.1% range, followed by Ueda's hawkish
comments. Investors were also rattled by signs the Federal Reserve would
soon cut rates to buoy a slowing U.S. economy.
BOJ Deputy Governor Shinichi Uchida said on Wednesday the rout was cause
for pause, as it might affect the bank's inflation projections and rate
trajectory.
"As we're seeing sharp volatility in domestic and overseas financial
markets, it's necessary to maintain current levels of monetary easing
for the time being," he said, adding that Japan could afford to wait on
hikes as inflation remained moderate.
While steadying markets, Uchida's about-face "also ended up magnifying
market swings", said Kazutaka Maeda, an economist at Meiji Yasuda
Research Institute. "It's undesirable for BOJ communication to cause so
much volatility."
DEJA VU
Now, said economist Yoshimasa Maruyama at SMBC Nikko Securities, "the
chance of a near-term rate hike is gone. In fact, the chance of another
hike this year has diminished significantly."
The central bank did not respond to a request for comment on Thursday to
criticisms that it is responding to market moves rather than data in
setting policy. Uchida on Wednesday insisted the BOJ was focused on the
economy.
"If the market volatility changes our projection, risks and view on the
likelihood of hitting our price target, then market moves would affect
our decision," Uchida told a press conference after addressing business
leaders. "Obviously, our goal is to achieve price stability and through
that, healthy economic development. We'll pay heed to economic
developments in setting policy."
Japan's ruling and major opposition parties have agreed to summon Ueda
to a special parliament session this month to explain the rate hike.
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Japanese national flag is hoisted atop the headquarters of Bank of
Japan in Tokyo, Japan September 20, 2023. REUTERS/Issei Kato/File
Photo
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In a rare public chiding, ruling Liberal Democratic Party executive
and former finance ministry official Satsuki Katayama urged the BOJ
on Wednesday to communicate better with markets, saying the LDP will
likely discuss whether the July hike was a mistake.
The BOJ has been here before.
It raised rates from zero in August 2000, ending a then-novel
experiment despite government objections. Ueda, then a policy board
member, voted against ending zero rates.
Next, the U.S. tech bubble burst, hitting Japan's export-reliant
economy. Eight months later the BOJ reversed course, rolling out a
new experiment, quantitative easing: flooding the market with yen to
support the economy and fight deflation.
By February 2007 it had raised rates to 0.5% when the global
financial crisis pushed Japan into recession and forced the bank to
cut rates back near zero.
In both cases, the BOJ drew fierce political criticism for phasing
out stimulus too hastily.
'PREOCCUPIED' WITH ANGER OVER YEN
This time few politicians are demanding the BOJ loosen monetary
policy. Days before the July hike, Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said
the BOJ's policy normalization would support economic
revitalization.
Shigeru Ishiba, a leading candidate seeking to replace Kishida in a
September LDP leadership election, told Reuters he welcomed the
BOJ's plan to gradually raise interest rates.
Politicians, who had long pressured the BOJ to ease policy to weaken
a soaring yen to help exporters, have switched in the past two years
as the currency's falls 38-year lows threatened to push inflation
above the bank's 2% target.
The BOJ may pay a price if its hawkish turn is seen as succumbing to
government pressure, some analysts say.
"Recent data all pointed to a weak economy, so it didn't make
logical sense for the BOJ to turn so hawkish on the future rate hike
path," said former BOJ official Nobuyasu Atago. "Its communication
with markets could have been better."
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Complicating the BOJ's task, it would be raising rates just as the
Fed likely starts cutting, potentially heightening volatility in the
dollar/yen exchange rate and hurting Japanese business sentiment.
The BOJ has historically avoided moving in the opposition direction
to the Fed for fear of hurting exports and causing disorderly market
moves, said former BOJ board member Takahide Kiuchi.
"This time, the BOJ may have been too preoccupied with public and
political anger over excessive yen falls," he said. "The very timing
of the BOJ's exit makes it extremely challenging to pull off in the
first place."
(Reporting by Leika Kihara; additional reporting by Makiko Yamazaki,
Kentaro Sugiyama, Takaya Yamaguchi and Yoshifumi Takemoto; Editing
by William Mallard)
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