Bloomberg
The Bank of Japan (BOJ) reiterated its ultra-loose monetary policy with four days of unscheduled bond buying as the widening interest rate gap with the U.S. puts upward pressure on bond yields and weakens the yen.
The move comes as Japan’s benchmark 10-year yield stayed elevated at the 0.25% upper limit of the BOJ’s tolerated trading band despite announcing unlimited bond purchases for the first time since late March. Similar maturity Treasury yields hovered just below 3% — underscoring a rate differential that’s driven the yen to a 20-year low.
The BOJ said actions were taken in light of recent yield moves and that consecutive fixed rate operations are aimed at firmly attaining the bank’s yield curve control target.
The currency weakened to little more than half a yen from key 130 level against dollar, before bouncing back to 128.59 in Tokyo.
After 13 straight days of declines, investors were also said to be buying the yen to close out short
positions.
The BOJ followed up an earlier announcement of unlimited fixed-rate operations with a statement saying it would make similar purchases on the next four trading days to April 26.
During its week-long tussle with markets last month, the BOJ said it would ramp-up its scheduled purchases before the market open, drawing attention to its determination to keep a lid on yields. This time round, it was less aggressive as it left scheduled purchase amounts unchanged and advised on its fixed-rate buying at the usual operation time, helping to avoid unduly adding to yen-selling appetite.
“While the dollar/yen is pausing after the rapid pace of rally, its uptrend remains intact as the U.S. raise rates more while the BOJ is not seen changing policy,†said Jun Kato at Shinkin Asset Management in Tokyo.
While surging inflation in other parts of the world spurs policy makers to raise interest rates, the BOJ stands out with its commitment to loose policy to boost a moribund economy. Dogged by decades of minimal price appreciation, the central bank is much less willing to withdraw stimulus until it’s convinced a revival will become sustainable.
The BOJ announces its latest policy decision on Thursday next week when it is also due to release inflation forecasts that are expected to show much stronger price growth this fiscal year. While economists are expecting it to hold firm with policy, should market pressure on the yen and yields intensify in the intervening days, speculation of a tail-risk surprise could grow.