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TOKYO: Bank of Japan governor Kazuo Ueda (right) speaks at the House of Representatives Finance and Financial Services Committee, as Japan's Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki (left) looks on Aug 23, 2024.-- AFP
TOKYO: Bank of Japan governor Kazuo Ueda (right) speaks at the House of Representatives Finance and Financial Services Committee, as Japan's Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki (left) looks on Aug 23, 2024.-- AFP

What to look for at BoJ’s October policy meeting

TOKYO: The Bank of Japan holds a two-day policy meeting concluding on Oct 31, days after a general election where new Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba faces a key test on his agenda to prop up wages and revitalize the country’s weak regional economies. Here is a guide on what to expect and why the BOJ’s rate review matters:

Will BoJ raise rates?

The BOJ ended negative interest rates in March and raised its short-term policy target to 0.25 percent in July. It has signaled readiness to hike again, once the board has enough confidence that Japan will durably hit its 2 percent inflation target.

With inflation stable around 2 percent and showing few signs of spiking, however, the BOJ is in no rush to pull the trigger. The central bank is widely expected to keep rates steady at the October meeting, as Governor Kazuo Ueda has stressed the need to spend time scrutinizing risks such as uncertainty over the US economy and the fallout from volatile markets.

Central banks typically avoid changing policy around big political events. The BOJ has plenty of reason to stand pat with a domestic election scheduled on Oct 27 and the US presidential election looming early next month.

The BoJ has said it will hike rates again if the economy and prices move in line with its forecast. That means its quarterly report, which will include the board’s fresh growth and price forecasts, may offer clues on the next rate hike timing. Sources have told Reuters the BoJ is unlikely to make major changes to its forecast for inflation to hover around its 2 percent target through March 2027.

While such projections would meet the prerequisite for more rate hikes, the BOJ may signal its readiness to go slow by highlighting risks such as slow global growth and the damage volatile markets could inflict on household and corporate mood. If the BoJ escalates warning over such risks or refers to them in the report’s portion on policy guidance, that could further diminish the chance of a year-end rate hike. Increased optimism over sustained wage hikes, by contrast, could be a sign the next rate hike is nearing.

Governor Ueda’s post-meeting briefing, to be held at 3.30 pm Tokyo time (0630GMT) on Oct 31, may offer clues on the pace and timing of further rate hikes. In a briefing in September, Ueda dropped signs of a pause by saying the BOJ can “afford” to spend time scrutinizing risks. His comments on the yen are also key as the currency’s sharp decline, which pushes up inflation via import costs, was among factors that led to the BOJ’s rate hike in July.

While still off a three-decade trough near 162 hit in early July, the yen fell to a two-and-a-half-month low below 150 to the dollar on Thursday. Further yen falls could put renewed pressure on Ueda to drop hawkish signals on the rate outlook.

After the October meeting, the BoJ next meets for a policy meeting on Dec. 18-19 followed by a meeting on Jan 23-24. A slim majority of economist polled by Reuters saw the BoJ forgoing a hike this year, with most expecting the central bank to raise rates again by March next year.

What could hamper further rate hikes?

The BoJ has signaled readiness to raise rates to levels deemed neutral to the economy - seen by analysts as somewhere around 1 percent - by around late next year or early 2026. But the road could be bumpy. The BoJ hopes bumper wage hikes offered by firms this year will underpin consumption, and allow retailers to keep hiking prices. But slowing global demand may discourage manufacturers from offering big pay hikes next year. Political clouds also hang over the BoJ’s rate-hike path. While Ishiba has said he will not interfere in monetary policy, the premier may push back against further rate hikes if his ruling party fares poorly in the Oct 27 election. — Reuters

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