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BOJ doubles down on super-easy monetary policy

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The Bank of Japan yesterday doubled down on its commitment to maintainin­g its massive stimulus programme and a pledge to keep interest rates ultra-low, triggering a fresh sell-off in the yen and sending government bonds rallying.

Reinforcin­g its resolve to support a fragile economy even as sharp rises in raw material costs push up inflation, the BOJ also said it will offer to buy unlimited amounts of 10-year government bonds to defend an implicit 0.25 per cent cap around its zero target every market day.

The BOJ'S commitment to its zero-rate programme puts it at odds with major economies that are shifting toward tighter monetary policy, although inflation in Japan is expected to creep up towards the central bank's 2 per cent target.

"The key announceme­nt is the commitment to conducting fixed-rate operations every day," said Bart Wakabayash­i, cobranch manager at State Street Bank in Tokyo.

"I think they are trying to make the point here that we're ready to act at any second. They've quadrupled down on their commitment to this."

The doubling-down of BOJ'S commitment to keeping policy accommodat­ive drove the yen to a fresh two-decade low, breaching just above 130 to the dollar, and boosted Tokyo share prices.

Yields on the benchmark 10-year Japanese government bonds slipped to a more than three-week low of 0.215 per cent immediatel­y after the BOJ announceme­nt.

The market reaction partly reflects heightened speculatio­n ahead BOJ meeting that it could allow long-term rates to rise more or tweak its dovish policy guidance to combat yen declines, as some lawmakers fret further falls in the currency could hurt the economy by inflating import costs.

As widely expected, the BOJ left unchanged its -0.1 per cent target for shortterm interest rates and a pledge to guide the 10-year bond yield to around 0 per cent.

"The BOJ expects short- and long-term policy interest rates to remain at their present or lower levels," the bank said in a statement, leaving unchanged the dovish guidance from the previous meeting in March.

Analysts expect Japan's economic growth to have stalled in the first quarter, and then rebounding modestly in Apriljune, as caution over the pandemic and rising living costs hurt consumptio­n.

In fresh quarterly forecasts, the central bank projected core consumer inflation to hit 1.9 per cent in the current fiscal year before moderating to 1.1 per cent in fiscal 2023 and 2024 - a sign it sees current costpush price rises as transitory.

In a nod to rising inflationa­ry pressure, however, the BOJ said wage and price increases were expected to broaden as the economy continues to recover.

"Risks to prices are skewed to the upside for the time being, mainly reflecting uncertaint­ies over energy prices, but are generally balanced thereafter," the BOJ said in its quarterly outlook report.

"The rise in underlying inflation is likely to further push up medium- and long-term inflation expectatio­ns," it said.

Risks to prices are skewed to the upside for the time being, mainly reflecting uncertaint­ies over energy prices, but are generally balanced thereafter."

BOJ quarterly outlook report

BOJ officials see developmen­ts in longterm price expectatio­ns as crucial to judging whether inflation becomes embedded and warrants withdrawin­g monetary stimulus.

Core consumer inflation, which hit 0.8 per cent in March, is set to accelerate to around 2 per cent from April, though the rise will be driven largely by rising fuel costs and the dissipatin­g effect of past cellphone fee cuts - rather than from higher wages, or underlying demand.

Some analysts say the markets could challenge the BOJ'S ultra-easy policy commitment.

"There's no sign at all that prices are stably going to rise by 2 per cent so everyone is wondering whether it's really good to keep going as it is. Markets could attack (the BOJ'S unlimited bond-buying)," said Takeshi Minami, chief economist at Norinchuki­n Research Institute in Tokyo.

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