Bank of Japan Is Set to Raise Interest Rates, Trump Permitting

(Bloomberg) -- Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda will size up the need to raise interest rates on Friday amid heightened expectations of a hike — and barring a market shock triggered by Donald Trump’s first few days in the White House.

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While the rest of the central banking world has been focusing on the pace of cuts, especially those at the Federal Reserve, Ueda and his board are still heading in the other direction as they look to gradually pull Japan back in the direction of conventional policy settings.

After decades of weak prices and feeble economic growth, Japan appears close to achieving stable inflation with solid wage growth, enabling the BOJ to push borrowing costs up toward levels seen in other major economies.

Some 90% of economists surveyed by Bloomberg this month said prices and economic conditions warrant an increase in rates from 0.25%. Of the surveyed economists, about three-quarters expect the central bank to move this week. Overnight swaps on Friday briefly showed a January rate hike almost fully priced in among traders.

BOJ officials also see a good chance of a rate increase as long as Trump doesn’t trigger too many immediate negative surprises, Bloomberg reported on Thursday, citing people familiar with the matter. A likely upward revision of price forecasts and robust wage growth expectations are among the factors favoring a move, the people said.

The report further fueled expectations of a looming hike after both Ueda and his deputy, Ryozo Himino, flagged that they would consider the need to raise borrowing costs at the upcoming meeting.

Some BOJ watchers interpreted the comments as a hint that action was in the pipeline, as the central bank’s top brass tries to improve the clarity of communications. A lack of messaging ahead of its July rate hike was blamed by some analysts for helping spark a global market meltdown in the summer.

Economists point to the yen as another factor. The currency has been hovering close to the 160 level against the dollar that prompted billions of dollars of market intervention to support the yen last year. A rate hike would narrow the gap between US and Japanese rates, giving the currency a lift.

What Bloomberg Economics Says:

“The most recent signal of rate hikes from BOJ officials is propping up the yen. In the longer run, a rise in Japan’s interest rates and stronger growth may also squash the yen-selling narrative.”