Business Standard

The changing ‘faces’ of banking policy

In Kuroda’s facial expression, researcher­s find ways to ‘predict’ central bank changes

- TOMO UETAKE Tokyo, 20 October

For decades, economists have tried to guess central bank policy direction by studying subtle changes in official language— now, researcher­s are finding new clues on policy, not in the words of central banker but in their faces.

In Japan, two artificial intelligen­ce researcher­s, one from Nomura Securities and the other from Microsoft, are using software to analyse split-second changes in the facial expression­s of Bank of Japan (BoJ) Governor Haruhiko Kuroda at his post-meeting press conference­s.

Their study found that Kuroda showed fleeting signs of ‘anger’ and ‘disgust’ at news conference­s that preceded two recent major policy changes— the January 2016 introducti­on of negative interest rates and the adoption of the so-called ‘yield curve control’ policy September last year.

The implicatio­n is that Kuroda was beginning to sense the constraint­s of existing policies about six or seven weeks before the central bank’s board actually decided to change them, the researcher­s concluded. The research was presented last weekend to a sub-committee meeting of the Japanese Society for Artificial Intelligen­ce.

At press briefings that took place immediatel­y after the changes were announced, Kuroda’s face registered less ‘sadness’, they found.

This could become a powerful tool in predicting policy changes, said Yoshiyuki Suimon, a researcher at Nomura’s Financial & Economic Research Centre and the lead author of the study.

“We’d like to analyse (Fed chair Janet) Yellen and (European Central Bank Governor Mario) Draghi next,” Suimon said.

Suimon and Daichi Isami, a Microsoft researcher, had studied together at the University of Tokyo’s Graduate School of Frontier Sciences and came up with this idea around the beginning of this year.

Working on their own time, the pair took screenshot­s of Kuroda’s face every half-second from video footage. Then they analysed those images with a program developed by Microsoft called “Emotion API” that uses a visual recognitio­n algorithm to break down human emotions into eight categories: happiness, sadness, surprise, anger, fear, contempt, disgust, and neutral.

Most of the time Kuroda’s expression was judged to be neutral. But the algorithm also detected subtle expression­s of other emotions that could be interprete­d in various ways.

The study appears to be the first attempt to decipher policy implicatio­ns from facial expression­s of a central bank chief, said Kiyoshi Izumi, professor of the University of Tokyo, who specialise­s in financial data mining and artificial market simulation.

“Their findings offer a fresh approach to analyzing policymake­rs’ inner world and minds,” said Izumi, also a member of the JSAI. “I think it’s possible to build up data on other key people globally, quantify it to predict what comes next.”

The analysis uses images that are traditiona­lly considered subjective and not measurable as a new source of informatio­n, he said. Suimon said he has already received inquiries from institutio­nal investors about his research.

Their study was conducted earlier this year and did not include the BoJ’s last post-policy meeting conference in September. The next meeting takes place October 30-31 at which market participan­ts expect no change to policy.

A BoJ spokesman said the bank was not in a position to comment on the study.

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