FILE PHOTO: A man wearing a protective mask walks past the headquarters of Bank of Japan amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Tokyo, Japan, May 22, 2020.REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File Photo

December 17, 2021

By Leika Kihara

TOKYO (Reuters) -The Bank of Japan is set to keep monetary policy ultra-loose on Friday but may dial back emergency pandemic-funding, less than 48 hours after the U.S. Federal Reserve signaled an imminent end to stimulus as policymakers respond to soaring global inflation.

The BOJ’s anticipated decision, underpinned by cautious optimism that the economic damage wrought by coronavirus crisis is gradually healing, will put it in line with major central banks’ moves to phase out crisis-mode policies.

Britain became the first G7 economy to hike interest rates since the onset of the pandemic on Thursday. The European Central Bank also took another small step in rolling back crisis-era stimulus, though it pledged to keep borrowing costs low next year.

Japan is expected to tread even more cautiously than the ECB in reducing economic relief because consumer inflation remains stuck well below its 2% target.

Markets will be focused on Governor Haruhiko Kuroda’s comments on the inflation outlook, and how the Fed’s signal of three rate hikes next year could affect the BOJ’s policy path.

With slow wage growth and soft consumption shackling inflation close to 0%, Kuroda is likely to reassure markets the BOJ will lag way behind its major counterparts in turning off the money tap, let alone raise interest rates.

“If more companies start to pass on rising costs to households, we might see core consumer inflation exceed 1.5% sometime next year,” said Mari Iwashita, chief market economist at Daiwa Securities.

“That may prod the BOJ to start dropping hints next year of future policy normalisation. But actual execution will be some time off,” she said.

At a two-day rate review ending on Friday, the BOJ is widely expected to maintain its short-term rate target at -0.1% and that for 10-year bond yields around 0%. It will also debate whether to extend a March 2022 deadline for emergency funding deployed last year to combat a pandemic-induced cash crunch.

Sources have told Reuters the BOJ may taper its corporate bond and commercial paper purchases given sharp improvements in big firms’ funding conditions.

Another funding scheme targeting smaller firms may be scaled back, too, though a portion of it could be extended beyond March to keep supporting cash-strapped retailers, the sources said.

While inflation has grabbed the headlines in some economies, with policymakers alarmed at the speed and scale of price spikes, Japan’s core consumer prices rose just 0.1% in October from a year earlier as firms remain cautious about hiking prices amid stubbornly weak household spending.

Kuroda told parliament on Wednesday consumer inflation may approach 2% on rising raw material costs, though he stressed the BOJ’s resolve to keep policy ultra-loose to ensure any pick-up in price growth is accompanied by higher wages.

(Reporting by Leika KiharaEditing by Shri Navaratnam)


Source: One America News Network

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