Japan's BOJ to cut interest rates, maintain inflation forecast

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Japan's BOJ to cut interest rates, maintain inflation forecast

TOKYO: The Bank of Japan is set to cut its massive stimulus programme on Thursday Oct 28 and maintain this year's inflation forecast in a sign it has no intention to follow other central banks eyeing exits from crisis-mode policies.

While rising raw material prices have pushed Japan's wholesale inflation to a 13-year high, consumer inflation is stuck around zero as weak domestic spending prevents firms from passing on higher costs to households.

Anaemic inflation and Japan's still fragile recovery will give the BOJ enough reason to maintain its target for short-term interest rates at - 0.1 per cent and that for 10-year bond yields around 0 per cent at its two-day policy meeting ending on Thursday.

In fresh quarterly projections, the BOJ is seen cutting this year's growth and inflation estimates, but sticking to its forecast of a moderate recovery, sources told Reuters.

Globally, central banks are shifting toward responding to inflation with rate hikes. But it's hard to see the BOJ becoming hawkish, partly because cost-push inflation alone won't prop up inflation to its 2 per cent target, said Hiroshi Ugai, chief Japan economist at JPMorgan Securities.

Markets are focusing on whether BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda will issue any warning against the yen's recent weakness, which gives exports a boost but drives up already high import costs for retailers still reeling from the pandemic's pain.

The dollar has hovered around 113.50 yen after hitting a four-year high of 114.585 yen on Oct 20, prompting the government to call for stable currency moves.

The dollar yen is still below the 125 level seen by analysts as Kuroda's line-in-the-sand. But the yen's real, effective rate fell roughly 4.7 per cent this year to 70.4 in September, BIS data showed, underscoring Japan's declining purchasing power.

With exports and output taking a hit from parts shortages and supply constraints, policymakers are hoping the Sep 30 lifting of state of emergency curbs will prod households to boost spending and help achieve a sustained economic recovery.

My hope is that Japan will gradually see pent-up demand materialise around year-end or the beginning of next year, BOJ board member Asahi Noguchi told a recent briefing.