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No reason to withdraw stimulus now: BoJ chief

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TOKYO: Bank of Japan (BoJ) Gov. Haruhiko Kuroda said there is “no reason” to raise the bank’s bond yield targets now with inflation so far from its 2 percent target, offering his strongest denial to date of the chance of withdrawin­g its massive stimulus any time soon.

The former top Japanese currency diplomat also played down the risk that President Donald Trump’s administra­tion will lean toward excessive protection­ism since the global community, including the US, benefits from free trade.

While Japan’s economy was slowly recovering, it still lacked enough momentum to quickly boost inflation to the BoJ’s target, Kuroda said, adding that risks to both the growth and price outlooks were skewed to the downside.

“There is no reason to reduce the level of monetary accommodat­ion in light of current economic and price developmen­ts,” Kuroda told a Reuters Newsmaker event on Friday.

“I do not think we need to raise our interest-rate targets now,” he said. “It is unclear whether inflation will hit our 2 percent target before my term ends next April.”

Japan’s long-stagnant economy has shown signs of life in recent months, with exports and factory output benefiting from a recovery in global demand.

Core consumer prices are expected to rise in February at the fastest pace in nearly two years, a Reuters poll showed, and many analysts project inflation to approach 1 percent later this year.

That has led to a dramatic shift in market expectatio­ns, with a majority of analysts polled by Reuters predicting the BoJ’s next move would be to scale back stimulus, possibly as early as the second half of this year.

Some analysts say the BoJ may be forced to raise its yield targets to avoid ramping up bond purchases if Japanese long-term interest rates track global bond yield rises, which are being driven by expectatio­ns of higher US interest rates.

Kuroda said the BoJ might debate hiking its interest-rate targets if Japan’s inflation accelerate­s sharply in the future. But he said the central bank would not increase its bond yield targets just because overseas long-term interest rates were rising, or in response to rises in a single price indicator.

“When deciding on monetary policy, we must look at the underlying trend of inflation ... We will not change monetary policy just because oil price rises push up inflation,” he said.

The BoJ also sees no immediate need to scale back the pace of purchases of its exchange-traded funds (ETFs), Kuroda added, shrugging off speculatio­n it could reduce buying as Japanese stock prices were on a firm note.

“The comments confirmed our view that a hike in the BoJ’s longterm rate target is unrealisti­c for now,” said Makoto Yamashita, chief bond strategist at Deutsche Securities.

Under a policy framework aimed at controllin­g the yield curve, the BoJ guides short-term interest rates at minus 0.1 percent and 10-year government bond yields around zero percent via aggressive asset purchases.

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