Tokyo Inflation Hits Fastest Pace in a Year, Supporting BOJ View

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(Bloomberg) -- The pace of price growth in Tokyo picked up, while other economic data suggested that Japan’s moderate recovery continues, backing the central bank’s economic outlook a week after authorities raised the benchmark rate again.

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Consumer prices excluding fresh food in the capital climbed 2.5% in January from a year earlier, the fastest pace since last February, according to the ministry of internal affairs Friday. Overall price gains also sped up to 3.4%, the fastest clip in nearly two years, as the cost of fresh food jumped.

Separate data showed the labor market appeared to remain tight as the jobless rate slightly decreased to 2.4%, and jobs to applicant levels remained at 1.25, meaning there were 125 job openings for every 100 job seekers. Industrial production and retail sales data were also broadly better than expected.

Friday’s batch of indicators largely fits in with the market view that there will likely be another rate hike in about six months. The latest Tokyo inflation figures, a leading indicator for the national trend, indicate that inflationary pressure remains elevated, an outcome that supports the Bank of Japan’s decision last week to raise borrowing costs to the highest level since 2008.

“With food prices such as rice rising and government subsidies for energy disappearing, I think that consumers’ perception of inflation is much higher than the data show,” said Hideo Kumano, economist at Dai-Ichi Life Research Institute. “I think that the BOJ has no reason to slow down the pace of interest rate hikes and will continue to raise interest rates at regular intervals.”

According to economists surveyed by Bloomberg, July is the most likely timing for the BOJ’s next rate hike, with September seen as the next most likely month for action. In a risk scenario, the rate change could come as early as April, according to 45% of the surveyed analysts.

Gains in Tokyo’s cost of living were led by processed food prices as the cost of rice surged 73% from a year earlier. Fresh food also surged 24% as both fruit and vegetable prices continued to rise.

The central bank surprised many economists by upgrading its quarterly inflation projections more than expected last week. For all three fiscal year outlook periods through March 2027, the BOJ for the first time expects inflation to be at or above its price target of 2%.