Japan holds tight to stimulus as peers dial back from crisis mode

Bloomberg

The gap between the Bank of Japan and its global peers widened. The BOJ maintained its aggressive asset-purchase and yield-curve targets less than 24 hours after the European Central Bank mapped out an exit from its crisis-era policies, and just days after the US Federal Reserve again raised interest rates.
Underscoring the divide, the BOJ downgraded its assessment of inflation while Governor Haruhiko Kuroda repeated his pledge to continue with stimulus until Japan reaches its 2 percent inflation target.
“It’s appropriate for Japan to continue current powerful monetary easing persistently,” Kuroda told reporters. He cited an entrenched “deflationary mindset” that’s beset Japan for decades but “doesn’t exist in the US or Europe.”
Economists, who were unanimous in forecasts for policy to remain unchanged, said there is little chance that the BOJ will consider an exit strategy in the near term. While Kuroda insisted that the longer-term price trend is positive, the BOJ said inflation is currently sitting in a range of 0.5 percent to 1 percent, weaker than around 1 percent earlier this year.
Kyohei Morita, chief Japan economist at Credit Agricole, said it’s “crystal clear” that the BOJ is headed in a different
direction than its peers.
“What’s interesting is that there is not much call for the
BOJ to add more stimulus,” Morita said. “The BOJ has done so much and it’s increasingly the view that the problem with Japan isn’t monetary policy but more economic structure and growth strategy.”
He added that with Kuroda now into his sixth year of aggressive stimulus, the limits of monetary policy are on show.
Kuroda said that a stronger yen and cheaper accommodation prices had weighed on inflation. Yet he said momentum is intact and that the BOJ’s
current policy is sustainable.
JPMorgan and Bank of America Merrill Lynch are among those who in recent weeks have pushed back their expected timing of the BOJ’s first move toward policy normalisation. In a Bloomberg survey, 88 percent of analysts said it wouldn’t start until 2019 or later.
“Inflation has certainly been lower than would’ve been expected,” Federal Reserve Bank
of St Louis President James Bullard said in Tokyo last month. “It’s been frustrating in Japan, but it’s also been instructive for the rest of the world to understand what kinds of things can happen if inflation expectations get rooted at a low level.”
“The Bank of Japan took a slightly dimmer view on current inflation in its statement, but left its assessment of the trajectory — a continued uptrend — unchanged,” according to Bloomberg Economics’ Yuki Masujima. “To us, this suggests that little has changed in the outlook for monetary policy.”
Board member Goushi Kataoka dissented from the view that inflation would likely rise toward 2 percent, saying the probability of that was “low at this point.”
He said the BOJ should implement additional stimulus if it cuts its assessment of medium- to long-term inflation expectations. Kataoka has dissented for seven consecutive meetings.
There will be intense focus on the BOJ’s next meeting at the end of July, when it is scheduled to update its inflation and economic growth projections. Kuroda said the BOJ needed further analysis and deeper discussion of inflation and the economy. Core inflation, which excludes fresh food, slowed for a second straight month in April, to 0.7 percent.
Despite weaker inflation, few analysts forecast additional monetary easing.
The BOJ’s tool box is nearly empty and side effects are piling up after five years of extraordinary stimulus.

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