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BoJ to keep policy steady, reassure markets stimulus exit still distant

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TOKYO: The Bank of Japan (BoJ) is set to keep monetary settings unchanged on Friday and reassure markets it will lag way behind the Federal Reserve in dialing back its massive stimulus program, with inflation stubbornly low despite a strengthen­ing economy.

BoJ Gov. Haruhiko Kuroda will also dispel market speculatio­n the BoJ is engaging in “stealth tapering” by stressing that the recent slowdown in the bank’s bond buying is not intentiona­l and simply the result of a stable bond market, said sources familiar with its thinking.

“The slowdown came as a result of our policy of guiding yields at appropriat­e levels,” BoJ Executive Director Masayoshi Amamiya told the Parliament on Tuesday, a view seen representi­ng the bank’s official line on policy.

At the two-day rate review ending on Friday, the BoJ is likely to maintain a pledge to guide short-term interest rates at minus 0.1 percent and the 10-year government bond yield around zero percent under its yield curve control (YCC) policy.

Growing signs of life in Japan’s economy have presented a fresh communicat­ion challenge for the BoJ, pushing it to be clearer with markets on how it might withdraw its stimulus — without sounding as if such an action is imminent.

Kuroda has rebuffed calls from some lawmakers and academics to disclose details on how the bank may exit its ultra-loose policy, arguing that such debate was premature with inflation distant from its 2 percent target.

But BoJ policymake­rs see an increasing need to enhance their communicat­ion on a future exit strategy given growing calls for more disclosure.

“The BoJ should not be afraid of revising (its exit strategy) in the future and openly debate the subject now, paying heed to market voices,” Akio Negishi, head of Japan’s life insurance lobby, said on Friday.

A Reuters poll showed economists were divided on whether the BoJ could communicat­e its exit strategy without causing market turmoil.

Jonathan Xiong, head of the Fixed Income Alternativ­es Group at Goldman Sachs Asset Management, expects YCC to stay for a long period as the BoJ has little choice but to act as a backstop when financial markets become volatile.

“They are stuck between a rock and a hard place because they cannot let (YCC) go, but it is not really having an impact,” Xiong said.

“At some point in time, that is going to be challenged — the efficacy of the policy, what impact it is having on the underlying fundamenta­ls,” he said, questionin­g whether the YCC effect was worth the cost of maintainin­g a huge balance sheet.

After four years of heavy asset buying failed to accelerate inflation, the BoJ revamped its policy framework to one controllin­g the yield curve from that targeting the pace of money printing. But it maintained a loose pledge to increase its bond holdings at an annual pace of 80 trillion yen ($727 billion) year to appease proponents of heavy money printing on the board.

While the BoJ argues it still has plenty of bonds to buy, many analysts expect its bond-buying program to reach a limit with the bank already owning more than 42 percent of the market.

Indeed, recent data showed the BoJ’s bond buying has slowed considerab­ly in recent months. Analysts expect the BoJ to slow the pace further to around 60 trillion yen by year-end and to omit the 80-trillion-yen pledge from its policy statement.

 ??  ?? Many analysts expect the Bank of Japan’s bond-buying program to reach a limit with the bank already owning more than 42 percent of the market. (Reuters)
Many analysts expect the Bank of Japan’s bond-buying program to reach a limit with the bank already owning more than 42 percent of the market. (Reuters)

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